1985, APRIL
Colin Whitaker, a local veterinarian, visits a dairy herd
of Holsteins on a farm in Kent to examine a
cow behaving madly. The first such case.
1986, NOVEMBER
the first official diagnosis of SSE,
a neurodegenerative condition in which the
brain is riddled with holes like a sponge.
1987, OCTOBER
the Veterinary Record reports the appearance of BSE in four cattle
herds, the first public reference.
1988, APRIL
after the source of the outbreak is
traced to cattle feed, the government convenes a
panel of experts that reports "it is most unlikely that SSE will
have any implications on human health."
JULY
ban on the use of animal waste in cattle feed.
AUGUST
the government orders the slaughter of infected cattle.
1989, JUNE
Bovine Offal Regulation is proposed by
the government banning brain, spinal cord, thymus,
spleen and tonsils from human consumption. It does
not come into force until
November.
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1990, MARCH
European Commission bans exports from
Britain to the Continent of cattle over six months old.
MAY
because of the BSE epidemic, a National
Creutzfeldt-Jacob Surveillance Unit is created
to identify changes in CJD patterns that might indicate an
association with BSE. Agriculture Minister John
Gummer demonstrates government confidence in beef when he
poses with his young daughter eating a hamburger.
SEPTEMBER
ban on using cows' brains and spinal cords in
animal feed.
1993
100 000 BSE cases identified
1994
CJD figures begin to rise. Six cases of a new variant
of the disease are diagnosed.
1995
first deaths from new variant CJD. Four more cases
diagnosed.
1996, MARCH 8
Dr. Rob Will of the CJD Surveillance Unit says that
findings pointing to a possible link between BSE
in cattle and the new CJD in humans have been
recorded.
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MARCH 15
Agriculture Minister Douglas Hogg and Health
Minister Stephen Dorrell are briefed.
MARCH 20
the Health Minister tells the House of
Commons that "the most likely explanation" for 10
fatalities from a new CJD variant was "exposure to
BSE before the offal ban in 1989. Douglas Hogg
tells the house that despite the small risk, "British
beef can be eaten with confidence."
Beef prices plummet. So do sales. Some call for
the destruction of all 11.8 million cattle in England,
Scotland and Wales, worth perhaps $12 billion.
McDonald's and Burger King announce they are
switching to non-British beef.
Most of Britain's European Union partners
institute unilateral bans on British beef.
MARCH 27
the European Commission imposes a ban on exports
of all live cattle, beef and derivatives.
MAY
the E.U.'s veterinary committee refuses to
undertake a gradual removal of the ban. John
Major threatens a policy of 'non-cooperation" with
Europe
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1997, MAY
elections in Britain bring in a
Labour government more eager to work
with Europe. Nonetheless,
the ban remains in place.
NOVEMBER 30
an inquiry is ordered into the screening
system for organ donors. Marion Hamilton had died of
lung cancer in February, but wary doctors sent her brain
tissue to be examined by the CJD Surveillance Unit where
the presence of the disease was confirmed. Despite the
investigation, her eye tissue had been donated to three
patients before CJD had been confirmed.
DECEMBER 2
SEAC tells the government it has
reviewed new evidence that infectivity has been found in
nerve tissues within the spinal columns of BSE
infected, animals and that infectivity may also occur in
bone marrow.
DECEMBER 3
Agriculture Minister, Jack Cunningham
announces a plan to ban the sale of all
beef on the bone.
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