logo
South Africa to ramp up vaccinations as foot-and-mouth disease spreads

South Africa to ramp up vaccinations as foot-and-mouth disease spreads

Reuters06-06-2025
June 6 (Reuters) - South Africa is building up vaccine stocks and expanding inoculations to fight a worsening foot-and-mouth disease outbreak, the agriculture ministry said, as the country faces threats to beef supplies.
Foot-and-mouth disease is a highly contagious, viral infection of cloven-hoofed animals that may also affect other species. Flare-ups have been reported over the past several months in five of South Africa's nine provinces, with KwaZulu- Natal being the worst affected.
This week, Karan Beef, opens new tab, which operates the country's largest feedlot and one of the world's biggest, reported an outbreak at its facility in Heidelberg, about 50 kilometres southeast of Johannesburg. The quarantine imposed on the feedlot, which slaughters about 2,000 cattle daily, could impact beef supplies.
The government has ordered over 900,000 doses of foot-and-mouth disease vaccines with the first batch expected to
arrive next week, the agriculture ministry said in a statement late on Thursday.
"These plans are not only about responding to outbreaks, but also about building permanent infrastructure to manage future risks," it said.
There are growing calls by some cattle producers to declare a "state of disaster" and protect the industry from financial losses. Invoking disaster law gives the government additional powers to intervene in a crisis.
The foot-and-mouth disease outbreaks have resulted in South African beef and related products being banned in markets such as China, Namibia and Zimbabwe.
South Africa's livestock sector is also recovering from its worst avian flu outbreak, which destroyed a third of the national chicken flock in 2023.
On Thursday, the government announced the first ever mass vaccination of poultry to prevent a repeat outbreak of high-pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI), a bird flu that spreads rapidly in an infected flock, causing a high death rate.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NHS issues vaccination warning for pregnant women over dangerous virus currently surging in Australia
NHS issues vaccination warning for pregnant women over dangerous virus currently surging in Australia

The Independent

time6 hours ago

  • The Independent

NHS issues vaccination warning for pregnant women over dangerous virus currently surging in Australia

Expectant mothers and people over 75 are being urged to get vaccinated against a potentially deadly virus following a record number of cases in Australia. Health chiefs say the Australian winter often predicts how viruses will spread in the UK, and already this year cases of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) have steadily risen in many areas. The virus, which is a common cause of coughs and colds, may also cause a chest infection called bronchiolitis. Some people have a high risk of becoming seriously ill with it, including babies and adults over 75. According to NHS England, RSV is a leading cause of infant deaths worldwide and a main cause of children being taken into hospital. Last winter, almost 7,000 bed days in England were taken up by children with RSV. NHS England is encouraging pregnant women to get a jab that protects against RSV so their babies are protected after birth. Kate Brintworth, chief midwifery officer for NHS England, said: 'While for most adults RSV only causes mild, cold-like symptoms, for older adults and young children it can lead to serious breathing problems that can end up in hospitalisation. 'Getting vaccinated while pregnant is the best way to protect your baby from the moment they are born, and now is the time for mums to act, to make sure their babies are protected ahead of their first few months this winter, when there tends to be more bugs circulating.' Yusra Osman says that when her son, Zakariya, was three months old, he developed bronchiolitis from the virus. He had a fever and was gasping for breath. The 34-year-old, from north London, said: 'Everything was a blur, but I remember his chest was caving in and out and he was really struggling to catch his breath.' Nurses found her son's oxygen levels were dangerously low. Ms Osman, a student midwife, said: 'That was one of those things you don't want to hear as a mum. He was crying, and we kept trying to put an oxygen mask on, but he was fighting to get it off and didn't want to be touched.' Zakariya, who is now seven, needed oxygen and a feeding tube in hospital. 'It's a mum's worst nightmare. Had the RSV vaccine been available then, I'd definitely have had it,' Ms Osman said. The RSV vaccine was offered to pregnant women in England for the first time last September and health officials say it has since helped to protect more than 300,000 mothers and babies. Pregnant mothers from 28 weeks onwards are eligible, as are adults aged 75 to 79. In the coming weeks, NHS England is set to invite more than a million people to have a jab, before the season for infections, which starts in October. Greta Hayward, consultant midwife at the UK Health Security Agency, said babies born in late summer or the autumn are most likely to be admitted to hospital with the virus. 'Hundreds of babies attend emergency departments each day for bronchiolitis through most of November and December,' she said.

Covid cases rising in US as officials plan to restrict booster vaccines
Covid cases rising in US as officials plan to restrict booster vaccines

The Guardian

time8 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Covid cases rising in US as officials plan to restrict booster vaccines

Covid is on the rise again in the US, as children begin returning to school and as officials plan to restrict booster shots. While cases are increasing less quickly than at the start of other surges, it is too soon to tell how big the current late-summer wave could get – and with highly varied immune responses from prior infections and vaccinations, it is difficult to know how severe illness could be, experts said. The risks of a wave are compounded by new vaccine restrictions from the Trump administration. 'If you're vaccinated against Covid-19, you're less likely to get infected,' said Andrew Pekosz, a virologist at Johns Hopkins University. 'But we haven't gotten a lot of people vaccinated for the past few years, and with the current recommendations changing, it's even less likely.' Future waves could become more severe as vaccination lags and immunity drops, Pekosz said. Several key measurements – including wastewater data, test positivity and emergency room visits – indicate a new rise in infections. In the past, Covid has surged about twice a year, usually in the summer and the winter. But the pattern can change, as it does with other respiratory viruses – with late or early starts to the season and curveballs like double peaks. 'Each year has been different, so in some ways, this is more of the same,' said Sam Scarpino, a professor of health sciences at Northeastern University. Cases are increasing or probably increasing in 26 US states, especially in the south and midwest, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). 'In the snapshot that we're seeing right now, increases are happening at a relatively low rate, and that would indicate that we probably aren't going to peak at a very high level. But again, this is early in this summer surge, so we really have to keep monitoring the data and paying attention to what it's telling us,' Pekosz said. The variants currently spreading around the globe have known immune-evasion properties, Scarpino said. 'You can look at the rise that we're seeing, the fact that we know it's an immune-escape variant, and I think we can be pretty confident that there's some kind of wave coming,' Scarpino said. 'Whether it's going to be large or small, I don't think we could really say one way or the other.' But 'the vaccines are still providing some protection,' he said. 'It's never too late to get the booster.' Yet officials softened the recommendation for children on Covid vaccines, and they removed the suggestion entirely for pregnant people, despite the clear benefits of the shot in reducing the risk of severe illness and death during pregnancy. A new, more effective Covid shot from Moderna and the Covid shot from Novavax were approved only for people over 65 or people over the age of 12 with health conditions. The independent advisers to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommended that vaccine manufacturers once again update booster shots this fall to a more recent variant. Covid boosters are usually recommended for all adults. But this fall, the boosters may be limited to older people and those with health conditions, FDA officials wrote in May. 'So it's a big question mark, going into the fall, is who it's going to be approved for,' Scarpino said. 'If it's not approved, can you still pay out of pocket for it? How much is it going to cost? And then are there going to be supply chain issues?' Health officials have also called for placebo trials for the boosters to judge their benefit to people without pre-existing conditions – but such trials would be unethical and extremely difficult to conduct, experts say. 'Clearly, the guidelines right now are focused on the populations that are more prone to have severe disease and severe outcomes. It's always been good to vaccinate that population,' Pekosz said. But the Trump administration is moving away from the approach of immunizing broad swaths of the population – especially those most likely to get and pass the virus on, like children, he said. 'If you vaccinate broadly, you can reduce the spread of Covid-19 in the population,' Pekosz said. 'The benefit, to me, is very clearly on the side of getting vaccinated.' Some of the pre-existing conditions proposed by FDA officials include asthma, diabetes, depression and physical inactivity. According to that list, 'basically everybody's eligible for one of the vaccines,' Scarpino said. And doctors, including pediatricians, may also prescribe vaccines for off-label use. Yet the more restrictions are placed on vaccination, the harder it is to reach even the people who need it most, Pekosz noted. Antivirals like Paxlovid could also see wider use, the experts said. 'We shouldn't forget about the antivirals,' Pekosz said. 'Those don't seem to be the target of more restrictive use by the CDC or the FDA, so those will be available for people if they do get infected.' A program to make Paxlovid more affordable to those who need it is slated to end in December. 'The benefits of antiviral treatment are very clear with respect to hospitalization and mortality decreases,' Pekosz said. Paxlovid is still highly effective against current variants, Scarpino said. 'There's a whole bunch of good reasons to get it.' Rates of hospitalizations and deaths in recent waves have dropped among adults compared with earlier Covid waves, but the virus remains deadly. An estimated 35,000 to 54,000 people in the US have died of Covid since October. Children continue to see hospitalizations rates from Covid similar to previous years. Covid cases can be less severe because of immunity – from prior infection or from vaccination. 'It's not so much that the virus has become less dangerous, it's that we have immunity, so we fight off the virus more efficiently than we did early in the pandemic,' Pekosz said. That's why vaccinations remain a key part of controlling Covid, he said. Without boosters, people become more susceptible to severe illness and death. About 23% of adults had received updated Covid boosters as of April. About 5.6% of children aged six months to four years are vaccinated against Covid, and about 15% of children aged five to 17 are vaccinated, according to the CDC. 'Children's cases are always surging, because children don't have much immunity to Covid,' Pekosz said. 'Covid cases are really occurring in children at a very high level right now. It's not nearly as dangerous in children as it is in adults, but it still causes a lot of hospitalizations in children.' Hospitalizations and deaths are not the only ways to measure the damage and disruption wrought by Covid. While the Trump administration has not released updated data on long Covid, an estimated 5.3% of all adults in the US said they were currently experiencing long-term Covid symptoms as of September. Even in times of lower transmission, Covid still circulates, with 149 deaths in the week ending 28 June, the last week for which the CDC shares full mortality data. 'It's still a little surprising that it's around all year,' said Pekosz. During lull times, 'we're not seeing it disappear completely, like we do with other respiratory viruses.' When it comes to keeping rates of Covid low, 'it's all the same stuff we usually go over,' Pekosz said – getting vaccinated, taking precautions like masking and using air purifiers, and staying home if you're sick. 'But it's just a very different environment these days. When the government doesn't use the science to drive their decision making, you can see the confusion that it puts into the general public.'

Brits face £5,000 fines for bringing five items back from holiday in UK customs crackdown
Brits face £5,000 fines for bringing five items back from holiday in UK customs crackdown

Wales Online

time12 hours ago

  • Wales Online

Brits face £5,000 fines for bringing five items back from holiday in UK customs crackdown

Brits face £5,000 fines for bringing five items back from holiday in UK customs crackdown The government has introduced tough new rules earlier this year as a result of an outbreak of a serious disease across Europe, which means that anyone returning from affected areas must ensure they are not carrying any banned items in their luggage People coming back to the UK from holidays in Europe have been banned from bringing a number of items in due to new laws (Image: Getty) Holidaymakers have been warned they could be hit with fines reaching £5,000 for trying to bring five particular items through customs - even if they bought them from duty-free stores. The government brought in strict new rules earlier this year to tackle an outbreak of a serious disease spreading across Europe. This means that anyone coming back from affected regions such as Spain, France, Italy and Greece must make sure they don't have any prohibited items in their luggage. A foot and mouth disease warning was issued to Welsh farmers earlier this year. ‌ The current restrictions mean that anyone found carrying items including sandwiches, cheese, cured meats, raw meats or milk into the country will be stopped at the border. It remains forbidden for travellers from all EU countries entering Great Britain to bring items such as sandwiches, cheese, cured meats, raw meats or milk into the country. ‌ This applies regardless of whether the products are wrapped or packaged, or whether they were bought at duty-free shops. ‌ Officials said that those caught with these products will be required to either surrender them at the border or have them seized and destroyed, reports Bristol Live. In serious cases, those found with these items run the risk of incurring fines of up to £5,000. The government has put measures in place to stop the spread of foot and mouth disease (FMD) following a rising number of cases throughout Europe. Read the biggest stories in Wales first by signing up to our daily newsletter here ‌ Travellers are barred from bringing in meat from cattle, sheep, goats, and pigs, as well as dairy products, from EU countries into Great Britain for personal use. This is to safeguard the health of British livestock, the livelihoods of farmers, and the UK's food security. Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) poses no threat to humans, but it is a highly infectious viral disease that affects cattle, sheep, pigs and other cloven-hoofed animals such as wild boar, deer, llamas and alpacas. Despite there being no current cases, the outbreak on the continent presents a significant risk to farm businesses and livestock in the UK. ‌ The disease can cause substantial economic losses due to production shortfalls in the affected animals, as well as loss of access to foreign markets for animals, meat and dairy. In response to confirmed outbreaks of FMD in Germany, Hungary, Slovakia and Austria earlier this year, the Government has already prohibited personal imports of cattle, sheep and other ruminants and pig meat as well as dairy products from these countries. The new restrictions apply only to travellers arriving in Great Britain, and will not be imposed on personal imports arriving from Northern Ireland, Jersey, Guernsey, or the Isle of Man. ‌ Farming Minister Daniel Zeichner stated at the launch: "This government will do whatever it takes to protect British farmers from foot and mouth. "That is why we are further strengthening protections by introducing restrictions on personal meat and dairy imports to prevent the spread of the disease and protect Britain's food security UK Deputy Chief Veterinary Officer for international and trade affairs Dr Jorge Martin-Almagro said: "Following the detection of foot and mouth disease in EU countries resulting in a rising risk of introduction into Great Britain, we have extended restrictions on the personal imports of food products that pose a risk in FMD transmission. ‌ "Robust contingency plans are already in place to manage the risk of this disease to protect farmers and Britain's food security. This biosecurity measure combined with all others we have implemented are critical to limit the risk of FMD incursion. "I would urge livestock keepers to continue exercising the upmost vigilance for signs of disease, ensure scrupulous biosecurity is maintained and to report any suspicion of disease immediately to the Animal and Plant Health Agency." However, certain exemptions to these regulations remain in effect. Small quantities of baby formula, medicinal foods and specific composite items such as chocolate, sweets, bread, cakes, biscuits and pasta are still permitted. Article continues below

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store