Bringing back the TB with illegal alein cheese! Thanks, we needed that!

Shogun

Free: Mudholes Stomped
Jan 8, 2007
30,528
2,263
1,045
Tainted cheese fuels TB rise in California
Unpasteurized dairy products linked to reemergence of ancient disease

By JoNel Aleccia
Health writer
MSNBC
updated 7:37 a.m. CT, Wed., June. 4, 2008

A rare form of tuberculosis caused by illegal, unpasteurized dairy products, including the popular queso fresco cheese, is rising among Hispanic immigrants in Southern California and raising fears about a resurgence of a strain all but eradicated in the U.S.

Cases of the Mycobacterium bovis strain of TB have increased in San Diego county, particularly among children who drink or eat dairy foods made from the milk of infected cattle, a study in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases shows.

But the germ can infect anyone who eats contaminated fresh cheeses sold by street vendors, smuggled across the Mexican border or produced by families who try to make a living selling so-called “bathtub cheese” made in home tubs and backyard troughs.


Scientists at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine are warning that improved screening, treatment and public education are necessary to prevent the spread of the disease that now accounts for about 10 percent of all new cases of TB in that border region — and, perhaps, others.

“M. bovis TB is a disease of antiquity,” said Timothy Rodwell, a researcher who led the study published by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “It is important that it not be allowed to re-emerge as a cause of TB in this country.”


Unlike typical TB, caused by the M. tuberculosis strain, the bovine variety isn’t easily spread through human-to-human contact. It settles less often in the lungs, making it less likely to be transmitted through breathing and coughing, Rodwell said.

Rare strain resists drug treatment
However, the M. bovis bug is resistant to front-line drug therapy and adults who contract it are more than twice as likely as those with traditional TB to die before treatment is complete.

Researchers studied nearly 3,300 culture-confirmed cases of TB in San Diego county between 1994 and 2005, the study showed. Some 265 of the cases were identified as the bovine TB. Though the number of cases remained small, they increased by nearly 65 percent over time, rising from 17 cases a year to 28 cases a year.

By 2005, more than half the M. bovis cases were diagnosed in children younger than 15, the study said. Nearly all of the cases were in Hispanics, and 60 percent were in people from Mexico. Between 2001 and 2005, 19 adults with M. Bovis died before or during treatment.

That worries TB health experts, who say that the small numbers belie a potentially large problem.

“I wouldn’t want to characterize it as increasing in epidemic proportions,” said Dr. Kathleen Moser, director of tuberculosis control programs for San Diego County.

“But it’s clearly being seen, and being seen in places where people drink unpasteurized milk and eat unpasteurized dairy products.”

Demand for Hispanic cheeses has skyrocketed in California, where 108 million pounds of legal, properly pasteurized queso fresco and other cheeses were produced last year, according to the California Department of Food and Agriculture.

Last year, Moser was concerned enough about dangerous, illegal varieties to launch a public health campaign that included ads on Spanish-language television stations and new brochures that warned families to beware of infected cheese.

Officials seize illegal cheese
Agriculture officials have been cracking down on illegally produced cheese, including more than 375 pounds of so-called “bathtub cheese” seized from an open-air market in San Bernardino last year, according to Steve Lyle, the agency’s director of public affairs. Such cheeses have been found to be colonized with salmonella, listeria, E. coli and M. Bovis TB.

The problem stems from cattle in Mexico, where M. Bovis infects an estimated 17 percent of herds. In the U.S., the problem is limited to occasional outbreaks among isolated herds. Overall, the U.S. virtually eradicated the M. Bovis variety in the 1900s, Rodwell said.

TB officials in the U.S. want to watch the trend closely. Although there are about 9 million new cases of TB in the world each year and about 2 million deaths, cases in the U.S. have dropped dramatically. More than half of the 13,300 U.S. cases a year are now concentrated in people born outside the U.S.

Tainted cheese fuels TB rise in California - Infectious diseases - MSNBC.com
 
is that how you say Montezuma's Revenge or were you making reference to some other archaic disease America had under control before a flood of mexicans showed up to mow the grass?
 
is that how you say Montezuma's Revenge or were you making reference to some other archaic disease America had under control before a flood of mexicans showed up to mow the grass?

You've never had an arepa? Maybe it's not a Mexican thing.

Why are you even worried? Looks like they're busy killing themselves off, you should be all :party:
 
killing THEMSELVES off by bringing a friggin DISEASE into the country?


oooook.


I guess we all wanted low cost TB too or something.
 
Just don't eat the cheese. Sounds like a personal choice to me, just like not smoking weed.

oh yes.. disease generally likes to limit its area of effect to mexican cheese. Hey, those silly fuckers dealing with the black death just shoulda avoided fleas!

<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/tuHZcHkqbSI&hl=en"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/tuHZcHkqbSI&hl=en" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>
 
oh yes.. disease generally likes to limit its area of effect to mexican cheese. Hey, those silly fuckers dealing with the black death just shoulda avoided fleas!

<object height="344" width="425">
<embed src="about:blank" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" height="344" width="425"></object>

If you read the article you posted, this one pretty much does limit itself to the cheese-eaters.
 
it's still a disease that was, for all general purposes, not found in the US, Ravi. That is, until some illegals decided to flaunt another American legality and bring TB back to the radar. NOT eating mexican cheese won't keep TB from spreading.


but, hey, we are america. of COURSE we'll let our citizens die so that Ravi can feel good about mexico's exodused class.
 
it's still a disease that was, for all general purposes, not found in the US, Ravi. That is, until some illegals decided to flaunt another American legality and bring TB back to the radar. NOT eating mexican cheese won't keep TB from spreading.


but, hey, we are america. of COURSE we'll let our citizens die so that Ravi can feel good about mexico's exodused class.

Not eating the cheese will keep this form of TB from spreading. Read the damn article. It comes from making cheese with raw milk...something that's been illegal for awhile.

Education is a lovely thing, Shog. Give it a shot.
 
Not eating the cheese will keep this form of TB from spreading. Read the damn article. It comes from making cheese with raw milk...something that's been illegal for awhile.

Education is a lovely thing, Shog. Give it a shot.

THE CHEESE IS BEING SOLD TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC RAVI. Of course it's been illegal in the US. WE comprehend laws beyond the latest ecuse for illegal aliens.

Indeed, just another law to ignore, eh?



Oh, and I just hired a LEGAL alien from Ghana today. It felt good to help someone who actually payed by the rules when making a better life for themselves.

:thup:
 
so is weed, doofus. Don't eat it, you'll be fine.

While I agree with your rationale Ravi, Shog has a valid point. TB is extremely contagious. All it takes is one person to get infected, give it to a friend/family member, then they give it to someone, that person goes to school and gives it to hundreds of kids....There's actually a possibility that it could spread rapidly even if you do stay away from cheese, because it's easily transfered from human to human.
 
While I agree with your rationale Ravi, Shog has a valid point. TB is extremely contagious. All it takes is one person to get infected, give it to a friend/family member, then they give it to someone, that person goes to school and gives it to hundreds of kids....There's actually a possibility that it could spread rapidly even if you do stay away from cheese, because it's easily transfered from human to human.

Sure, Brian, but it says right in the article it is mainly spread by eating the bad cheese and it isn't easily transmitted between humans. IMO, just another way to crank up Shogun and his xenophobic buds.

Even if it's not from Mexico, don't eat unpasteurized cheese or milk. M. Bovis is one of the reasons we pasteurize.
 
oh yes.. the MAIN vector probably REALLY IS the ONLY vector. I mean, fuck, Ravi.. of COURSE we can shrug off what was once an unknown disease in this nation... RAVI says that TB is MANAGABLE.


[roll fucking eyes]
 
oh yes.. the MAIN vector probably REALLY IS the ONLY vector. I mean, fuck, Ravi.. of COURSE we can shrug off what was once an unknown disease in this nation... RAVI says that TB is MANAGABLE.


[roll fucking eyes]

It's never been unknown. Do a little research. Like I said, one of the reasons why selling raw milk products is illegal.

It's too bad too, because I love me some Mexican cheese.

:cool:
 
it's been UNKNOWN to AMERICANS who don't ahve to deal with that shit because WE removed it from OUR BORDERS. Why don't YOU do a little research and discover that the US is NOT MEXICO even if a third of MEXICOS population is here disregarding ANOTHER necessary law.


Indeed, perhaps you should go tot fucking MEXICO and invest in that shithole with your love of MEXICAN CHEESE.
 

Forum List

Back
Top