Wednesday, April 13, 2011

TB in elephants called 'a gray area'

Elephants participate in the annual pachyderm parade marking the arrival of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus to Baltimore March 28. Karen the elephant recently tested positive for tuberculosis, but a follow-up test was negative. (Gene Sweeney Jr., Baltimore Sun / March 28, 2011)

The Baltimore Sun
Laura Vozzella

April 6, 2011

An animal-rights group contends that an elephant performing in Baltimore with the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus poses a health risk to the public because she has tested positive for tuberculosis, but circus and government health officials say the animal is no threat because she does not have an active form of the infectious disease.

Karen, a 42-year-old Asian elephant, tested positive for TB in a blood test but negative in a follow-up test known as a trunk wash, which involves taking a culture of saline solution run through the animal's trunk.

The positive blood test was enough to get Karen barred from entering Tennessee with the rest of the circus back in December. But it appears that health officials in that state, where TB was transmitted from another elephant to nine employees at a refuge in 2009, were taking a stricter stance than required by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which calls for quarantining elephants only if they have an active case of TB.

Elephant-to-human transmission of TB is a very new field of study — that it occurs at all was only officially established in 2009 by a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study, prompted by the outbreak at the Tennessee refuge — and experts are still trying to determine the best way to deal with the problem, said Dr. William Schaffner, chairman of the Department of Preventive Medicine at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine and one of the authors of the CDC study.

"This is a large gray area," Schaffner said, borrowing a line from one of his co-authors, Rendi Murphree, an epidemic intelligence service officer at the CDC and a visiting scholar at Vanderbilt. The USDA is holding a meeting in Kansas City this very week to discuss the matter.

"Could an elephant have a positive MAPIA [blood] test and a negative trunk wash and still be infectious? Is that possible?" Schaffner said. "That's where the current scientific discussion lies. How reliable is a negative trunk wash test? That is a legitimate area of discussion. There are people that say every elephant with a positive MAPIA should be held back under infection control precautions — quarantined, if you will — and treated. Others say it's not necessary."

Even given all the unknowns, Schaffner thinks that there is little risk of a spectator at the circus becoming infected from an elephant.

"If you're at a circus, you're at a great distance from the elephants," he said. "You do not have genuinely prolonged contact with them. You're there for two hours of the show. That sort of exposure should not put people at risk."

He added: "I would let my grandchildren attend."

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals discovered late last week that Karen had a positive TB blood test and had been barred from Tennessee, in documents it obtained through a government Freedom of Information request, said Delcianna Winders, the group's director of captive animal law enforcement. Winders said she forwarded the information to Baltimore animal control officials Monday and that someone there initially told her the city would bar the circus from using Karen. Later, Winders said, the city reversed course and said the animal could perform.

The animal-rights group sent an email to The Baltimore Sun on Wednesday morning headlined: "PETA Applauds City of Baltimore for Pulling Ailing Ringling Elephant From Performances." A few hours later came a follow-up from PETA: "TB-Infected Elephant Put Back Into Circus Ring — Humans Put at Risk."

City officials said that there was no about-face and that they reached their conclusion after consulting with appropriate state and federal experts.


"There are established USDA standards by which the potential disease risk is assessed, and this particular case does not meet these standards," the city Health Department said in a prepared statement. "The decision to allow Karen the elephant to perform at First Mariner Arena in Baltimore City was based on careful consideration of many factors, including veterinary evaluation of the elephant's health records. Based on all the information obtained, and in consultation with DHMH, MD Department of Agriculture and the US Dept of Agriculture, Baltimore City HD has determined that Karen the elephant can participate in scheduled performances in Baltimore."

Courtesy of Mark Rosenthal

"This is crazy. The only risk to the public is the 2nd handler in this picture, walking behind Sonny Ridley. That huckleberry is a real menace and needs to be kept under strict supervision. I see they give him the easy elephant to walk with, while his father and the real elephant men handle the tough ones.

2 comments:

Joey frisco said...

Thanks alot wade the only close supervision I get is from my better half my wife... Other than that they try to let me slide with the easy elephants....

Wade G. Burck said...

Joey,
No thanks necessary, you know it was my pleasure. Don't get to cocky. I have seen folks get hurt with the easy elephants, when they get to grand standing and hanging paper on an animal walk, and step into a pot hole and twist a knee all up. Give my best to your father and your better half. You are lucky to have them. I have neither.
Be safe friend,
Wade