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Transcript
YOU CAN'
STOP
BRUCELLOSIS
(Bang's Disease)
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Federal Cooperative Extension Service
Oregon State College
Corvallis
Extension Circular 533
July 1949
TO STOP BRUCELLOSIS*
(Bang's Disease)
P44e& 2/ew dIe4d
DON'T
Have your HERD blood-tested REGULARLY for Brucellosis.
Maintain isolated maternity stalls and
lots.
Isolate cows about to calve.
lsolate cows that have aborted.
Purchase animals from unknown sources
(public auctions, cow peddlers).
Make additions except from CLEAN
HERDS.
Let your cows run at large.
Notify your county veterinarian if cow
aborts.
Harbor stray animals. (Including dogs)
Keep a supply of disinfectantand
USE IT.
Let your fences get out of repair.
Keep strangers out of your barns.
Try to raise all your own replacements.
Permit your cafile to mingle with others.
MAKE PURCHASES FROM HERDS
Permit hauling of your animals except in
PROVEN FREE OF BRUCELLOSIS DUR-
DISINFECTED vehicles.
ING PAST YEAR. (Several tests during
year)
Permit cow dealers to enter your barns.
Keep purchased animals isolated from
your herd until they have passed a clean
test.
VISIT INFECTED PREMISES.
Carry out your veterinarian's instructions on sanitation.
* For a more complete discussion of this subject see Extension Bul.
etin 682, "Brucellosis of Cattle."
WHEN A HERD BECOMES INFECTED IT IS USUALLY THE OWNER'S FAULT
Protect Your Family
)#iaw Ihe 47aas
HUMAN BRUCELLOSIS (Undulant Fever,
Bang's Disease) on the farm is caused by infection from livestock.
Brucellosis is most common in the following oc-
cupations: veterinarians, slaughter house employees, meat handlers, and farmers.
It is one of the common INFECTIOUS DISEASES of humans in the United States.
Two per cent of the SEVERE CASES CAUSE
DEATH. Disability for long periods with frequent relapses after apparent recovery is common.
It can be transmitted by contact with infected
cattle, hogs, goats, or raw (unpasteurized) milk
from infected cows or goats.
In Oregon it is mostly by contact with infected
cattle or unpasteurized milk on the farm.
Eating or HANDLING RAW MEAT from infected animals can transmit Brucellosis.
It is not transmitted from one human to another.
The only POSITIVE CONTROL is the ELIMINATION of the disease from livestock.
Cooperative Extension Work in Agriculture and Home Economics
%Vm. A. Schoenfeld, Director
Oregon State College and United States Department of Agriculture,
Cooperating
Printed and distributed in furtherance of the Acts of Congress of May 8
and June 30, 1914