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by Grazester 3718 days ago
When I was a teen I was so freaked out by this fact during the mad cow episode in England that I never ate beef since. I would not for a few years even eat anything prepared in close proximity to where beef was being prepared. I lived in the Caribbean at the time...
1 comments

The risk with beef was always pretty low. Actually not eating beef and eating an alternative meat is probably riskier given the prevelance of salmonella and other nasty bacteria in chicken.
If you are specifically (and erroneously) terrified of catching a prion disease, chicken is still better. You're much more likely to get sick but much less likely to catch a prion disease.
What about fish and other seafood?
Which has to be the leading contender for our civilization's equivalent to "those Roman Empire folks were so dumb for using lead, ha ha". Though it is highly doubtful that lead poisoning caused the downfall of the Roman Empire, one to two order of magnitude elevated levels of exposures compared to normal background levels were no picnic the bodies of for those exposed.

Another example of distributed costs, concentrated benefits really screwing us over in the long-run.

I was not worried about salmonella or even an Ecoli infection. It was the prions from contaminated beef I was concerned about.
I am sure. I was just pointing out that your risk of dying was likely increased by not eating beef and eating chicken.
I thought that the spooky thing about prion-based diseases like CJD is that symptoms can take a long time to appear after exposure. (Although, on reflection, I can't justify this, and quick googling does not turn anything up.) The onset of death after first symptoms is relatively quick (a few months to a year).

The point being, that we may not be able to measure risk at this time, because the prions may be latent in people. (Cue spooky music.)

I lived in Germany in the 80's when my dad was stationed there as part of the military. I am barred from giving blood in the United States, as are many military men and women who served during that time, because of this [1]. This is especially sad because many active and former military personnel, and their families, take blood donation very seriously.

I was raised to do it, but I am now barred due to the note on the eligibility sheets. I talked to a Red Cross area administrator about it and he said that, even though it has been over 20 years, they are unlikely to lift the ban until effective testing and treatments are found. Since there are no tests, they can't risk the blood supply.

[1] Check the details of the Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, Variant (vCJD); "Mad Cow Disease" option: http://www.redcrossblood.org/donating-blood/eligibility-requ...

Back when the UK banned butchers from selling beef on the bone, my mother was still buying it "under the counter". Her argument was always- if it's here then we've already got it.