| |
[December 2002]
What state officials aren't telling you about chronic wasting
disease -- the politics and blunders behind its spread and the true
dangers.
When I spoke to Wisconsin Division of Public Health
epidemiologist James Kazmierczak on September 13, he had the
cheeriness of a man about to leave for a three-week vacation. A day
earlier, his department had dispatched a news release intended to
quell the "paranoia" haunting the state since a front-page
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel story suggested that the chronic
wasting disease in the state deer herd might infect humans. It
seemed a bit hasty to publicize part of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention's yet-to-be-completed investigation, but
Kazmierczak, his agency's CWD point man, was eager to allay fears
before he left town. In fact, he almost delighted in pointing out
that one of three men who, according to the newspaper, shared wild
game feasts in Wisconsin's Barron County, had died of a totally
unrelated disease.
"You could live on a diet of deer brains and never get sick.
There is either no, or very low, potential for infection in humans,"
he told me. Brains, eyes, spinal cords, spleen, tonsils and lymph
nodes are the most infectious parts of a deer with CWD, making
Kazmierczak's statement shocking, to say the least. But from the
moment Gov. Scott McCallum ordered the state's agriculture, natural
resources and health departments to "find a way to work together" to
fight CWD, Kazmierczak had a job to do.
Even before the news story, officials feared that the deer herd,
growing in some parts of Wisconsin at 50 percent per year, might
explode if hunters stayed away. A statewide poll suggested just that
in May: Thirty-six percent were considering sitting out the hunt; 42
percent were concerned about eating venison. "I could make a
statement on the safety of venison, or [Department of Natural
Resources Secretary] Darrell Bazzell could, but we're not health
personnel and everything we said would be viewed as, 'Oh, he's just
worried about license sales,' " says Tom Hauge, director of DNR's
Bureau of Wildlife Management. So that task fell to Kazmierczak,
who, though he works in public health, is a veterinarian, not a
physician. From the very beginning, says an Ag Department source,
"Our greatest fear was that the media would link CWD with mad cow
disease in Britain."
Despite the fact that 32 Wisconsin deer had already tested
positive for CWD (with 10 more added in mid-October) and that the
state was about to launch a Herculean effort to test up to 60,000
more, Kazmierczak was not alone in dismissing the danger. State
veterinarian Clarence Siroky, Wisconsin's highest-ranking animal
health official, was traveling the state telling hunters, "CWD is
like scrapie in sheep [which has never been shown to infect humans].
It's not mad cow disease in deer. There is nothing to fear about
CWD, other than its spread within the deer herd." When someone in an
audience near Appleton asked Siroky whether he would feed venison to
his granddaughter, he answered, "Yes."
Even the chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-Madison lent
his voice to the "don't worry, keep hunting" chorus. But while all
the reassurances were going on in public, in the back rooms of state
government, a very different scenario was playing out. State health
and safety experts were trying to force the DNR to make volunteers
"wear decontamination outfits, moon suits" when they collected deer
brain stem samples. "Can you imagine what kind of message that would
send, the panic it would cause around the state?" asks Carl A.
Batha, DNR wildlife management supervisor. "The paranoia that's
gripped the populace seems to have infiltrated the DNR at the
highest levels."
Some DNR officials traced the paranoia all the way to the
governor's office. The DNR had spent thousands of hours planning to
build a landfill on state property north of Dodgeville to dispose of
25,000 to 30,000 deer carcasses from its CWD eradication zone, a
more than 400-square-mile area in southwestern Wisconsin.
Engineering work was complete, the heavy equipment about to roll in
when the governor ordered the carcasses cremated instead. "We have a
$2 billion budget crisis in this state, but we're treating deer
carcasses like nuclear waste," DNR Western Area Wildlife Supervisor
Tom Howard complained in September. "Cremating a carcass costs $124;
landfilling $5." Ultimately, the DNR retained a La Crosse fur
company that will skin, shrink-wrap, freeze and store the carcasses,
allowing DNR to cremate only deer testing positive for CWD. The
whole thing will cost about $2.5 million.
If you ask the country's highest-ranking experts on prion
diseases like CWD, mad cow and human Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(CJD), they will tell you that only incineration, bleach and
chemical tissue digestors destroy the infectious agents that cause
the diseases and that serious public concern is warranted. "We have
repeatedly underestimated these diseases, and we've been wrong.
People have died because of it," says Judd Aiken, UW animal health
and biomedical sciences researcher. "I'm not an alarmist and I don't
like having people mad at me, but it's the truth when I say don't
consume venison from an area where CWD exists."
Seeing the course Kazmierczak and Siroky were taking, Dr. G.
Richard Olds, chairman of medicine at the Medical College of
Wisconsin, asked his Medical Society colleagues last summer, "Are we
going to sit here and let the politicians bury this? Or are we going
to speak up?" In October, the Medical Society of Milwaukee County's
Public Health Committee chose the latter, saying there was a very
small but real concern that humans might contract CJD from eating
infected venison. "There is no direct evidence to show CWD is like
mad cow disease, but it is reasonable to expect it will be," says
Olds.
The group urged the state to adopt the steps Britain has taken to
stop mad cow disease and immediately ban venison handling by meat
processors who also prepare beef, chicken and other meats. The
nearly indestructible CWD disease prions, it said, could contaminate
equipment and pass into the rest of the food chain. "People have the
right to decide for themselves whether they want to eat venison,"
says Olds. "They shouldn't have to worry that other meat they eat is
contaminated."
Meanwhile, worried nurses asked MCW neurologist Piero G. Antuono,
who has conducted autopsies on the brains of six CJD victims,
whether their husbands should go hunting. "For God's sake," he told
them, "don't you dare give venison to your kids... Forty percent of
people in this state eat venison, but I would not eat deer meat from
anywhere in Wisconsin... It's like not wearing a seatbelt," he says.
"The chances are you'll still get home safely, but why would you put
yourself at risk?"
A Killer Spreads When Bill Mytton, DNR's now retired
big-game specialist, learned in late February that CWD had crossed
the Mississippi for the first time and been discovered in Wisconsin,
his first words were, "Oh, shit!" "I can't even describe how I
felt," he says. "It was this sickening fear." For two years, the
department had been more concerned about TB spreading from lower
Michigan, and it had begun testing a few deer killed during the
gun-hunting season. DNR added a test for CWD almost as an
afterthought. CWD had ravaged free-ranging deer in Colorado and
Wyoming for decades but remained there until 1997, when it started
spreading through game farms in South Dakota, Nebraska, Colorado,
Oklahoma, Montana and Kansas. Infected elk exported from a single
South Dakota ranch carried CWD to Saskatchewan, Canada, and Korea,
says Mytton. Canada destroyed more than 7,800 elk trying to stop the
disease; Korea banned elk farms entirely.
Like elk, deer can carry the disease for years without symptoms,
infecting other animals. Until just recently, there was no
live-animal CWD test, and by 1999, at least 24 elk from infected
herds had been shipped to a handful of Wisconsin game farms. Steven
W. Miller, administrator for DNR's Division of Land, so feared CWD
that in 1998, he had tried to stop importation of deer and elk from
the infected area, but the legislation necessary kept dying in the
state Senate. Still, no one had expected to see CWD in Wisconsin
anytime soon. Game farmers had a self-interest in avoiding the
disease, and it would take decades to travel 1,000 miles, breech the
Mississippi River and turn up here.
To be safe, in 1999, the DNR began testing deer shot near the
game farms involved with the 24 elk in Fond du Lac, Dodge,
Jefferson, Sheboygan and Washington counties. There was no trace of
CWD in 630 deer brains examined in 1999 and 2000. In 2001, it set
out to sample more deer, this time in Viroqua, Crivitz, Black River
Falls, Spooner and the upper Michigan border. At the last minute,
Mt. Horeb was added to the list because a previously unassigned DNR
worker lived nearby. The Mt. Horeb site contributed 82 of the 345
tissue samples tested for CWD that year and three tested positive.
The DNR was lucky to have detected CWD at all. "It was a fluke,"
says Mytton. "The number of samples was so small, you wouldn't even
really expect to find it."
Three DNR game wardens were immediately dispatched to tell the
hunters involved that their deer, all bucks 2 to 3 years old, had
CWD. One had already turned his deer over to DNR because it looked
sickly, but the others had been healthy specimens and the families
had already consumed some of the venison.
It takes an average of 15 months for a deer infected with CWD to
exhibit symptoms, but they can occur in as little as six months or
not show up for as long as eight years, says Hauge. Then it will
display abnormal behavior, stupor, head tremors, staggering, lack of
coordination, trouble judging distance and difficulty swallowing.
CWD-infected deer drink lots of water, increasing urination, and
slobber excess saliva. They "waste away" until paralysis or
pneumonia set in. "It is not a pretty death," says Hauge.
Scientists believe nose-to-nose contact spreads CWD, as well as
environment and food contaminated by saliva, urine and feces and by
does who infect their offspring. At first, they also believed that
less than 5 percent of deer were susceptible and that CWD would
remain confined to parts of Colorado and Wyoming. But then it
destroyed 15 percent of the mule deer in northeastern Colorado,
killed 52 percent on a ranch in Nebraska and crossed the Rocky
Mountains.
Gaining speed, the killer turned up in a Nebraska mule deer in
2001. Officials there proclaimed a "wildlife disease emergency,"
predicting that CWD would "explode" if it got into the whitetail
population and "devastate" that state's "entire deer population in
50 years." The USDA declared a national "CWD emergency," pledging to
focus on game farms and wipe it out. Still, by August 2002,
CWD-infected deer had been found in Montana, Kansas, South Dakota,
New Mexico and Saskatchewan and Alberta, Canada, besides Wisconsin.
Even the DNR itself could become a casualty. Last year, it sold
730,000 gun and 258,000 bow hunting licenses in what has become a
$1.5 billion-a-year state deer hunting and processing industry.
Revenue from those licenses underwrote about a third of the
conservation and wildlife management programs the state operates.
CWD also threatens to wipe out a way of life. The deer hunting
culture may be stronger in Wisconsin than anywhere else in America.
Here, residents talk about gun-hunting season, the third week of
November, as "Holy Week," and spouses left behind hold Hunting
Widows' Balls. Over the past five years, Wisconsin has ranked first
in the average number of deer killed annually by hunters, with
465,000, followed by Michigan (455,000) and Pennsylvania (428,000),
says Dan Schmidt, editor of Deer and Deer Hunting Magazine.
That's despite having one of the shortest gun-hunting deer seasons
in the country, nine frenetic days. In spite of the large harvest,
mild winters and widespread feeding have pushed reproduction up, so
that 30 percent to 50 percent more deer are born each year.
Biologists say the state can sustain 1.1 million wild deer. Going
into the fall hunt, the state's official estimate was 1.6 million,
but the U.S. Geological Service National Wildlife Health Center put
the total closer to 2 million. The DNR has tried in vain to expand
the hunt for 10 years, running into opposition from the Wisconsin
Conservation Congress and snowmobile industry.
The burgeoning herd has already driven up damage to agricultural
crops, devastated wild habitat on which other animals depend and
devoured ornamental plantings around suburban homes. In 2001, the
state reimbursed farmers $1.5 million for crop damage, money from a
$1 hunting license surcharge. Since 1997, DNR's crop damage fund has
paid out more money than it has collected. And last year, Wisconsin
had 90,000 deer-vehicle collisions, more than any other state in the
country, according to The Wall Street Journal, forcing taxpayers to
pay higher insurance premiums and at least $600,000 to renderers and
landfills that dispose of road kill.
"If CWD scares hunters away," says Batha, "if the count is way
down, we will throw up our hands. There was a special legislative
session to give us the power to kill the deer if hunters don't, but
I don't see how we will. I'm still looking for ardent hunters to
help us, unless fear or their wives keep them away."
The DNR will provide "disposal options" for hunters in its
eradication zone and the surrounding 10-county management zone, but
in the rest of the state, hunters are on their own. The DNR quietly
explored putting dumpsters at deer registration sites statewide, but
"our fear is that if we build it, they will come," says Hauge, "and
then how can we afford to pay the cost of disposing all of those
deer?" The DNR is already spending more than $12 million on its CWD
offensive.
CWD's Family Tree When Richard Race, a leading
researcher on CWD and related diseases with the National Institutes
of Health's Rocky Mountain Laboratories, heard Kazmierczak's comment
about eating deer brains, he was appalled. "That's irresponsible. Do
we want to have a repeat of what happened in Britain, where for 10
years the government said BSE [mad cow disease] was safe to eat, and
so far we have 133 people dead because of it?" asks Race. "It's not
fair to say people either are or aren't susceptible to CWD at this
point. Not enough people have eaten enough infected venison and
lived long enough for it to incubate."
Researchers who saw the first cases of CWD in Colorado deer in
1967 thought it was a nutritional problem. By 1980, they realized it
was part of a family of deadly neurological disorders called
transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), affecting humans,
sheep, mink, cats and other animals. The most famous TSE of all,
bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), appeared in Britain in 1985.
It killed nearly 200,000 cattle, then spread to humans who consumed
infected beef. Unlike most diseases, which are caused by viruses or
bacteria, the infectious agent in TSEs is believed to be a normal
protein that mutates, becoming an infectious protein, or prion, and
then causes the misfolding of other proteins. The process creates
sponge-like brain lesions leading to physical and mental decline.
Although human cases are rare, TSEs are so significant that two
Nobel prizes for medicine have been awarded for prion disease
research.
When mad cow disease first appeared, officials said it was "just
like scrapie in sheep," the oldest known TSE, never known to have
infected humans. The disease is called scrapie because infected
sheep become so deranged that they rub themselves raw attempting to
scrape off their fur. There is unproven speculation that CWD
originated when environmental contamination passed scrapie from
sheep to deer housed at Colorado State University's Foothills
Research Station, then to wild deer and elk. That's one reason
Wisconsin officials say CWD is like scrapie. Of course, that's what
the British government thought, too, while nearly two million
contaminated cattle slipped into the human food chain.
For more than a decade -- even after cats fed infected beef meat
and bone meal came down with a mad cow-like disease -- the British
government insisted that human beef eaters were protected by a
"species barrier." Five years after some physicians and scientists
started sounding alarms about eating infected beef, then British
Prime Minister John Major was still reassuring the public: "There is
no scientific evidence that BSE can be transmitted to humans." In
January 1996, British Agriculture Minister John Gummer appeared on
TV to feed his young daughter, Cordelia, a hamburger to demonstrate
that beef was safe.
Two months later, everyone knew it wasn't true. Two dairy
farmers, a butcher, a meat pie maker and eight young people who had
eaten contaminated beef were dead from an Alzheimer's-like disease
called new variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (nvCJD). It looked
similar to the rare sporadic CJD that affects only one person per
million, but when their brains were autopsied, they looked just like
the brains of mad cows. The government finally admitted that the
"species barrier" -- if it existed at all -- had holes in it.
The World Health Organization now says mad cow disease passed to
humans when they ate infected beef. Hamburgers and processed meats
like sausage that included bovine offal (by-products) -- brains,
spinal chords, eyes, lymph nodes, thymus and intestines -- areas
with the highest concentration of disease prions, are the chief
suspects, although laboratory scientists have since found TSE
disease agents in blood and muscle, too. (Dr. Olds says
Wisconsinites should forgo venison sausage even if deer offal is
left out and their deer tests negative for CWD because there is no
guarantee their deer won't be mixed with others in the
sausage-making process.)
No one knows how much infected meat you'd have to eat to get new
variant CJD or even whether a little now and then will add up to
infection. But as little as one-half gram of BSE-infected brain --
the size of a good vitamin pill -- taken orally will infect a cow,
NIH senior prion disease researcher Paul Brown told the FDA's TSE
Advisory Committee on January 19, 2001.
Cooking at temperatures above 600 degrees F doesn't kill the
infectious agent in TSEs, nor do detergents and enzymes known to
kill most viruses. Radiation doesn't faze it, and even after being
buried in the soil for three years, enough prions remain to spread
the disease. Chlorine bleach is one of the better disinfectants, in
concentrations of 50 percent and higher, but sometimes even that has
diminished effectiveness. It's difficult to find a neurologist like
Antuono willing to autopsy the brain of a patient suspected of dying
of a TSE. A splash in the eye of bodily fluid can carry the disease
straight to the brain.
Beef by-products are now banned from human consumption in Europe
(though not in the United States), but since human TSEs incubate for
decades, no one knows what the final human death toll will be. Those
who have already died shared one of three genetic variations for the
human prion protein, a genetic make-up seen in 40 percent of the
population. But "that doesn't mean others are immune," says UW's
Aiken. The disease may merely incubate longer in people with other
genes.
The DNR's CWD Risk Assessment, written by former DNR veterinarian
Doris Olander, dismisses the likelihood that CWD will infect humans.
Says Olander: "Researchers and hunters have been exposed to CWD in
Colorado for decades without becoming infected" and "there is no
scientific evidence that CWD is transmissible through consumption of
meat from an infected animal."
But "people overemphasize the lack of evidence of transmission of
CWD," says University of Colorado neurologist Patrick Bosque, who,
with Nobel laureate Stanley Prusiner, found disease prions in rather
high levels in the muscle tissue (meat) of TSE-infected mice,
research published in the prestigious Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences. "And a lack of evidence is not evidence. In
Colorado, the number of hunters in the endemic area was very small,
and if it did transmit to humans, we wouldn't necessarily be able to
see that yet. It's more reasonable that if you feed enough
CWD-infected meat to enough people and wait long enough, some people
will get it. But is it 1 in 10,000? Or 1 in 10 million? We don't
know."
Research published in May 2000 in The European Molecular
Biology Organization Journal states: "CWD transmissions would be
similar to transmissions of mad cow disease," adding that, "it would
seem prudent to take reasonable measures to limit exposure of humans
(and cows and sheep) to CWD infectivity." But Olander, who has since
gone to work for the USDA, looked at the same report and concluded
that CWD is "less likely" to affect humans. She becomes vehement
when asked about it now: "I wouldn't go hanging your hat on one
paper. This isn't the be-all and end-all study," she says.
The study she discredits was authored by some of the most
respected CWD research scientists in the country, including one the
DNR flew in as a CWD consultant. The Milwaukee County Medical
Society's Public Health Committee cited the same research in calling
for new precautions in processing venison and cited "studies dating
back to 1986" that "suggest an association" between hunting and CJD.
One, conducted by Temple University and the NIH in 1996, found that
exposure to deer through a hobby such as hunting resulted in a
ninefold increased risk for CJD.
In a way, Wisconsin has become a giant petri dish for a grand
experiment. It is not the first time the state has been on the
frontier of TSE research, nor the first time a public official like
Olander has tried to downplay unsettling research on TSEs. Only
then, she was on the other side.
Wisconsin's TSE History The original human TSE, classic
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, is often mistaken for Alzheimer's, but it
is a rare nervous system disease that results in rapidly progressive
dementia, a nightmare of madness and terrifying hallucinations, loss
of motor control, paralysis and death. Discovered in the 1920s, it
seems to occur spontaneously across the globe (300 per year in the
United States), attacking victims with a mean age of 68. Scientists
refer to it as "sporadic CJD." Another extremely rare type of CJD
occurs in families.
But in the 1950s, a human TSE called kuru was discovered among
the primitive Fore people of New Guinea, and it was epidemic.
American researcher Carleton Gajdusek received the Nobel Prize in
1976 for showing that kuru was spread by the Fore's ritual
cannibalism of deceased relatives, including eating the brains of
those who died of kuru. From kuru, scientists learned that a human
TSE can incubate 10 to 40 years.
Transmissible Mink Encephalopathy, a related disease, has a long
Wisconsin history. Four of the five known U.S. outbreaks since 1947
have occurred here. The first killed every mink on the affected
Wisconsin ranch. In 1969, the late UW-Madison researcher Dick Marsh
discovered that TME could be transmitted to raccoons and monkeys in
the lab. By the mid-1980s, both Marsh and Nobel laureate Gajdusek
believed all TSEs were really one disease altered by the passage
from one species to another, and that a single TSE could have
multiple strains that act differently. (The CWD in Wisconsin and the
CWD in Western states may turn out to be distinct strains, but at
present, scientists are applying the little they know about the
Western disease to Wisconsin.)
When mink TSE wiped out 60 percent of the 7,300 breeding mink on
a Stetsonville, Wisconsin, ranch in 1985, Marsh traced the disease
to the mink's feed, downer dairy cows (cows unable to walk and
considered unfit for human consumption). Marsh injected some of the
infected mink tissue into the brains of two calves and waited. In
less than two years, the calves' rear legs collapsed under them just
like downer cattle. He injected some of the calves' brain tissue
back into healthy mink. After an incubation period identical to that
in the original infected mink, the new mink developed the same
disease.
Concluded Marsh: "If spontaneous cases of prion diseases can
occur in humans, they likely also occur in animals. Not naturally
transmitted to other members of the species, these spontaneous
incidents can still pose a danger because of the unnatural act of
cannibalism, as seen in kuru in humans or... the feeding of animal
protein produced by rendering ruminants" back to other ruminants
(sheep, cows, elk, goats and deer). In effect, the then common
practice made herbivore cattle into cannibals. In 1995 alone, DNR
records show that 26,488 road-killed Wisconsin deer were rendered
into feed.
No case of mad cow disease has ever been confirmed in the United
States, but Marsh urged the USDA to ban the practice of feeding
processed bone and blood meal made from rendered sheep, cows and
deer to other ruminants. His suggestion would have cost the
agricultural industry dearly in substitute protein, and the USDA
took no action. Frustrated, in 1993, Marsh repeated his concern in
the state Ag Review, warning Wisconsin dairy farmers they
were feeding cattle to cattle. He also talked to The New York
Times. Marsh's published comments ignited such a torrent of
complaints from the state's agri-business industry, which
underwrites much of the UW Agriculture School's research, that the
college's dean tried to silence Marsh. Marsh was harassed and
threatened with lawsuits, and the university sponsored a symposium
"whose only purpose seemed to be arguing there was no need to change
animal feeding patterns," recalls Aiken, then a Marsh colleague, as
was Olander. (Both joined Marsh in pushing for a broad
ruminant-to-ruminant feeding ban.)
Marsh was "not allowed to speak, while everyone discredited his
work," says John Stauber, executive director of the Madison-based
Center for Media and Democracy, who dedicated his book, Mad Cow,
USA, to Marsh. Despite the humiliation inflicted by the
university, Marsh would be vindicated. When protein feed from
rendered downer cows and scrapie sheep was identified as the cause
of mad cow disease in Britain in 1996, the university lionized Marsh
in its Wisconsin Alumni Magazine as the scientist who'd
predicted the disaster and tried to stop it.
"We were inundated. We had over 200 phone messages from CBS, NBC
and other people in the media who wanted to talk to Dick," remembers
professor Bruce Christenson, Marsh's successor as chair of the
department of animal health and biomedical sciences. But by then,
Marsh, 58, had cancer, recalls Christenson. "He was a warrior even
when he knew he was dying."
Expert Advice Battered by public criticism over his use
of state planes, Gov. McCallum still arranged for one to fly Mytton
and one of the DNR's wildlife veterinarians to Nebraska, where a
meeting was under way on CWD. McCallum wanted Wisconsin to tap into
the nation's best CWD expertise. To their dismay, the two soon
discovered Wisconsin's situation was vastly different, and much
worse.
CWD in the West was found in desolate rural areas with fewer than
six deer per square mile. In Wisconsin, it was just outside the
state's second-largest city, an area where deer density is more than
100 per square mile. Wisconsin's annual deer harvest is more than
200 times Colorado's, 10 times Wyoming's. Worse still, Wisconsin
deer are highly social whitetails, not solitary mule deer. A mule
deer might infect three or four others in a year; a single whitetail
could infect 16, says UW-Madison wildlife ecologist John Cary.
The experts looked grim when they heard these things, recalls
Mytton. "They said, 'You people in Wisconsin are in a shitload of
trouble... There is no way you are going to stop this thing.' "
Undaunted, the three agencies summoned by the governor -- the DNR,
Department of Health and Family Services and Department of
Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection -- along with experts
from UW-Madison, the UW-Extension and the USDA, became the "brains
or planning arm" of the state's CWD operation, to use Hauge's words.
On March 20, the DNR held its first CWD public information
meeting in Mt. Horeb, drawing a crowd of 1,200. "It was probably the
largest CWD meeting ever held in the United States," Hauge says, and
a measure of "the close bond people in Wisconsin have to the land
and deer." Colorado CWD expert Mike Miller told the crowd his state
had made a big mistake. It decided to wait until it had more
research, he said. "If Colorado did what you're doing here, 20 or 30
years ago, you wouldn't have this problem now."
There were 1,500 at the next public CWD meeting, but it was no
longer just state residents who had a stake in Wisconsin's war on
CWD. All of the country's 14 million deer hunters do. "If Wisconsin
doesn't stop CWD, it will move all the way across the country. This
will be a national story," warns Allen Boynton, wildlife biology
manager for the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries.
"Wisconsin is doing the right thing. There is no other responsible
thing they could have done given current knowledge of this thing,"
he adds, explaining that Virginia has already outlawed deer and elk
farms and will begin testing for CWD this fall, as will most
Southern and Northeastern states, because, "It scares us to death."
How the Epidemic Started The DNR set out to learn how
CWD got to Wisconsin to prevent a possible repetition of events. It
had three suppositions. One was that a hunter had brought a
CWD-infected deer back to Wisconsin from Colorado. The disease could
have spread when he dumped the carcass. Deer are herbivores, but
"more than we ever thought, deer do chew on the bones of other deer,
maybe as a source of minerals," says Hauge, citing the work of
Canadian animal behaviorist Valerius Geist.
A second potential culprit was an unidentified wealthy landowner
who unwittingly imported an infected deer, then released it into the
wild to improve the local breeding stock. This seemed preposterous
to DNR's Batha the first time he heard it, but when he met a
well-heeled landowner who had paid $60,000 to have red pines planted
along a roadside because he didn't like passersby looking at "his"
wild deer, Batha knew anything was possible.
The third DNR theory pointed a finger at the state's deer and elk
farmers and at the Ag Department regulating them. It blamed some
Wisconsin deer farms for importing infected animals. Despite their
high fences (7 feet, 10 inches required by law), more than 100 have
escaped. DNR found a decayed deer along a Mt. Horeb highway with a
game farm tag in its ear. But an infected animal wouldn't even have
to break away from a farm to infect wild deer, says Mytton, offering
as proof a photograph of a captive and a wild deer touching noses
through a fence.
When Ag officials read the DNR's three theories in the newspaper,
neck hairs bristled. Neither side, of course, endorsed any notion
that incriminated itself, and internally, some Ag personnel pointed
back at the DNR, blaming its "mismanagement" of the herd. They
called CWD "Mother Nature's way of downsizing." And even some DNR
officials agree the herd was out of control. Says Don Bates, who
runs DNR's pheasant farm: "There have been 9- and 10-year-old does
killed in the Mt. Horeb area, even one 12-year-old. That tells me
this area was not managed as well as it should be, for a very long
time."
Another Ag Department hypothesis says CWD has always been here.
"How many deer are supposedly starving to death each year? Well,
maybe it's been CWD," says an Ag source. "Minnesota was so proud it
didn't have any CWD, but they'd only checked 50 deer. And how come
Wisconsin is the only state east of the Mississippi that's found
CWD? Because we're the only one that's looked for it." The problem
with that theory, says NIH researcher Race, is that "given how
rapidly CWD spreads, you'd find it all over." And, adds Hauge, "the
herd would never have grown like it did." UW ecologist Cary suggests
that given the number of cases found so far, and their distribution,
CWD has been here for four or five years. In 25years, he says, it
will wipe out all of the deer in a 5,184-square-mile area.
The most troubling explanation for CWD's appearance came from
neither state agency but from veteran agricultural and environmental
writer Mike Irwin, freelancing in Madison's Capital Times.
Irwin's groundbreaking reporting linked CWD to a group of landowners
in western Dane County who, in 1990, began a concentrated effort at
deer management in order to raise "super" bucks. The landowners, who
controlled 12 abutting square-mile sections in the northwestern part
of the town of Vermont, agreed to give young bucks six years to grow
so they'd develop the imposing antlers and muscular bodies that
would get them into the record books. Then they began long-term
feeding of nutritional supplements to wild deer. Their effort
succeeded: Between 1990 and 2000, Dane County recorded the
third-highest number of trophy bucks in North America.
Up until August 1997, when the FDA, reacting to Britain's mad cow
epidemic, banned all ruminant-to-ruminant feeding (sheep, cattle,
goats, elk, deer, antelope and buffalo) in the United States,
Midwestern rendering plants routinely processed Wisconsin deer
carcasses into meat and bone meal that went into feed mill products
fed back to ruminants, including deer. (Cows, sheep and deer can
still legally be processed into bone and blood meal feed for pigs,
pets and chickens; then they can be rendered and fed back to cows,
deer and other ruminants.)
The feeding practice may have amplified the disease in the same
way feeding spread TSEs among the Fore people, Britain's cows and
the Wisconsin mink, something further suggested by the fact that 11
of the first 18 cases of CWD found in Wisconsin came from the "super
buck" area. The connection is especially vexing because "that kind
of feeding has been going on all over the state," says author
Stauber, "more evidence that CWD is spread all over Wisconsin." The
DNR did ban feeding of deer statewide once CWD was discovered, but
by then, much of the damage had been done.
How the State Blew It Politics played a hand in CWD's
spread as well. By the mid-1990s, state deer and elk farmers were
bridled under DNR's control and, together with their lobbyists, they
pressured legislators to move them to the friendlier regulatory
climate of the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer
Protection. On June 1, 1996, all but the state's whitetail-only deer
farms got their wish (whitetail farms move to DATCP control January
1, 2003).
"The Legislature took control away from an agency with 150
wardens and gave it to an agency that has four people statewide, and
they have to regulate beef and hogs, too," says retired DNR big-game
specialist Mytton. "It would be like having four cops to enforce the
55 mph speed limit statewide. You just had a totally unregulated
industry."
The 931 Wisconsin deer and elk farms now manage approximately
35,000 animals, making this one of the leading states in the
multibillion dollar U.S. deer and elk trade, which provides trophy
hunts and sells antlers, the velvet from them (the so-called "velvet
Viagra") and scent used to lure deer. Since 1996, Wisconsin farms
have imported 3,000 animals, some from infected herds in Colorado,
Nebraska and Saskatchewan, and since 2000, more than 900 have moved
within the state from farm to farm.
That was just the kind of movement the DNR sought to stop. When
DNR officers looked into the game farms after CWD was discovered,
Mytton says, they were still importing animals. "And when we
reviewed their books, they'd have fewer animals than their records
said, but they'd just say, 'Oh, they escaped,' and there's no
penalty." Mytton and others suspected that some died from CWD, but
there was no way to prove it.
One of the DNR's biggest opponents every time it tried to get
tighter regulations on elk and deer farm imports or add rules
against baiting and feeding wild deer was state Sen. Kevin Shibilski
(D-Stevens Point), says Mytton, who now lives in Montana. "He'd be
lobbying until the middle of the night to kill it. Shibilski
threatened the department numerous times." (Shibilski is now
demanding that the DNR provide inexpensive CWD tests to hunters, the
same tests researchers like UW's Aiken say "are not meat safety
tests because they will miss some infected animals" and give hunters
false assurances.)
Seriously limited by a lack of enforcement staff, DATCP tried
friendly persuasion to convince deer and elk farmers to voluntarily
test for CWD. It didn't work. More than 80 percent did no voluntary
testing at all, and there were no deer farms at all among those that
did.
As early as 1998, word of CWD's threat was spreading nationally.
"The recent rash of cases in captive elk has created a strong
possibility that things are going to get worse with CWD," warned the
University of Georgia quarterly newsletter, typical of what others
were saying. On April 17, 1998, Nebraska officials cautioned DATCP's
Siroky (the man who would feed venison to his granddaughter) that a
Bloomer, Wisconsin, farm had imported an elk from a CWD-infected
herd. In May, Colorado tipped off DATCP that a West Bend farm had
imported animals from another CWD-infected herd. Did DATCP
investigate to see whether state herds had become infected? It
barely seemed interested. The May 27 letter from Siroky's deputy,
veterinarian Robert Ehlenfeldt, sent to the second farmer, reflects
the regulator's attitude. It says, "The state of Wisconsin currently
has no rules covering CWD and is taking no action... No restrictions
are being placed on your herd."
Meanwhile, says Mytton, "We had Department of Ag people yelling
at us because we wanted to address the problem with an actual
quarantine." When Mytton suggested requiring double fencing and
health certificates showing a source herd had tested CWD-free for
five years, he says Siroky told him, "That would be implementing
Gestapo tactics."
Fearing CWD, Montana Fish and Wildlife had already imposed a
moratorium on deer and elk imports when, on September 15, 1998,
Hauge's boss, Steven W. Miller, administrator for DNR's Division of
Land, wrote a letter to then DNR Secretary George Meyer recommending
Wisconsin do the same. DATCP immediately alerted deer and elk
farmers. In a letter dated September 23, 1998, Mike Monson,
president of the Wisconsin Commercial Deer & Elk Association,
wrote Siroky: "Some people in the DNR are out to get us," adding
that he saw "no reason they should impose a moratorium when not
enough is even known about the disease."
In early October 1998, Siroky attended the U.S. Animal Health
Association's national meeting in Minneapolis, where the CWD threat
was again a major topic, but he apparently remained unconcerned. The
next month, DATCP turned over the question of whether there should
be new rules to address CWD to an advisory committee stacked heavily
in the industry's favor. It included 10 elk and deer farm
representatives and one member from both DNR and DATCP.
Not surprisingly, the committee failed to recommend any
additional regulation. The January 21,1999 meeting minutes show
Siroky (or his replacement, Ehlenfeldt) telling the group no new
rules would be enacted without its approval, then saying, "how CWD
is transmitted is unknown" but that "feed containing tainted animal
by-products and genetic susceptibility have not been ruled out" and
CWD "is not an infectious or contagious disease." Clearly, that last
comment is inaccurate. CWD is highly contagious, something already
documented in animal health literature and the reason for Montana's
import ban.
The minutes explain that most of Wisconsin's deer and elk farms
are primarily breeders of trophy animals (not meat producers) and
"don't necessarily want to know" if they have CWD. So instead of
testing animals that died or were killed on their farms, potential
threats to the state's free-ranging deer, all of the state's deer
farmers and most of its elk farmers ignored the problem -- with the
state regulator's blessing.
More than 80 percent "hadn't been doing any testing. Well, what
does it suggest when one of the first captive deer tested after the
new mandatory CWD testing law passed in late August tests positive
for CWD?" asks UW ecologist Cary. Perhaps fittingly, the
CWD-infected buck shot September 4 by an out-of-state hunter who
paid $4,000 to hunt on an Almond, Wisconsin, game farm, belonged to
Stan Hall, a member of DATCP's do-nothing advisory committee.
No one knows yet how far CWD has spread across Wisconsin, but
because Hall's CWD-infected Portage County deer had contact with
animals on farms in Marathon and Walworth counties, the number of
Wisconsin counties suspected of having CWD doubled to six. "In areas
outside the region where there's CWD," says Kazmierczak, "it's
business as usual" for hunters. The question is, just how far has it
spread?
A Battle Plan There was no internal dissent when the
CWD science and health team voted on its plan: Kill and test all
25,000 to 30,000 deer in what, by late October, had grown 43 percent
into a 411-square-mile eradication zone near Mt. Horeb, including
parts of Dane, Sauk and Iowa counties. In the 10-county area
surrounding the eradication zone, half to three-fourths of the deer
will be killed (up to another 70,000). In each of the remaining 59
counties in the state, 500 will be tested. If none of the 500 deer
test positive in any county, hunters will know "with a 99 percent
degree of certainty" there is no CWD there, say officials. Hunters
worried about eating infected venison can freeze their meat until
the results come back.
The trouble is, with DNR testing tens of thousands of deer, it
will take months to get the results. "But even if your deer tests
negative for CWD, that doesn't say your venison is good to eat,"
cautions DNR Western Area Wildlife Supervisor Tom Howard. Using a
lymph node and tonsil CWD test like the one commercially available
for $60, the DNR found seven positive cases of CWD in July that were
missed by brain stem tests because they don't detect CWD until it
has incubated for 15 months. Lymph tissue tests can detect CWD 30 to
40 days after infection, but it takes an experienced pathologist to
spot the one or two small foci where CWD appears, and it's easy to
miss cases. "There is a great deal of pressure from the top Ag and
DNR people not to debunk the tests," says UW researcher Aiken.
"These tests are fine tools for surveillance, but we should not be
using them as a food safety tool."
No part of dealing with CWD is going to be fast or easy. Cary's
computer model predicts that it will take six years to eliminate all
of the deer from the eradication zone, then 18 or more to return the
deer population to normal. "What we are trying to do," says Hauge,
"is like trying to change the tire on a vehicle cruising 60 miles an
hour." Once all the deer are killed, "you will have to keep
eliminating deer... until there are five years with no disease."
But the imminent problems are with initial eradication and waste
disposal. By fall, more than 70,000 acres, almost 30 percent of the
target area, had been closed to the eradication effort because of
landowner opposition. The groups behind it -- Citizens Against
Irrational Deer Slaughter (CAIDS) and Landowners for a Rational
Response -- want the DNR to proceed slowly, do more research.
This opposition believes that only a small percent of the herd is
susceptible to CWD. "They are absolutely wrong," says Aiken. "What
we're seeing in the lab is much, much higher than that. In deer, CWD
is very contagious. No other TSE is like this. It's not like mad cow
disease. We can't just stop feeding protein and have the disease go
away."
Although the state will cremate any CWD-positive deer killed in
the eradication zone, there is concern that prions from infected
deer killed elsewhere could con-taminate the environment. On
September 11, Hauge and a cadre of support staff drove to Berlin,
Wisconsin, to convince the city's sewage treatment plant directors
that it is safe to continue to accept liquid residue from the local
National By-Products animal rendering facility. The plant handles
waste from 260 butchering operations that will process venison this
fall. The city fathers feared infectious prions concentrated in the
liquid would remain in the water their sewage plant discharges deep
into the earth. National By-Products District Manager Charlie Beard
told the group his plant won't accept the remains of deer from the
eradication zone or its surrounding counties. But his company's Iowa
plant is doing exactly that. This summer, Iowa DNR officials
intercepted a National By-Products truck hauling road-killed deer
from Wisconsin's CWD management area to its Ames rendering plant.
"Those deer very likely had CWD because it makes them go into a
stupor, and they're more likely to get hit," says Iowa DNR biologist
Bob Sheets.
"Our concern is that CWD could spread country-wide through feed.
Oh, they'll stamp it, 'Don't feed to ruminants,' but some poor
peanut farmer in Arkansas is going to look at that $3 bag of animal
protein feed and a $10 bag of soy protein, and he'll use the first."
But when Iowa asked Wisconsin DNR to help stop the practice, says
Sheets, "They told me, 'Well, that's the cheapest cost for us to get
rid of it. If you want us to do something else, you'll have to pay
the difference between a couple dollars and $125 a deer." Sheets was
stunned. "There's no interagency cooperation going on at all," he
says. (National By-Products also bid on processing all deer from the
eradication zone. Asked how it would dispose of the deer, Beard said
it was "a trade secret.")
In Berlin, DNR vet Olander reassured city fathers that "prions
are hydrophobic -- they stick to solids," and the board agreed to
continue taking the renderer's effluent. Meanwhile, other Wisconsin
cities threatened to fine hunters who put deer waste in their
garbage. DNR's Howard advised at least one hunter to just "dig a
hole and bury it... it's a scientifically sound option."
But at the NIH, leading prion scientist Race doesn't agree. "We
don't think landfilling is a great idea" because the disease agent
can survive for years, surface and infect other animals. But then,
"treating rendering plant effluent and injecting it into the soil
doesn't sound too good either. The way to handle this stuff," says
Race, "is by incineration and putting the ash in a closed container
or in alkaline pressure cookers."
Death By Venison?
 Mary Riley | Mary Riley didn't
like the smell of venison cooking, so when her husband, Glenn, got a
deer in Wisconsin, or in Colorado, where they lived from 1989 to
1999, he'd have the whole thing made into sausage and jerky. Now and
then, Mary would eat it, Glenn says, because her friends often
served it.
Once when Mary's best friend, Dawn, invited them for a chili
supper, Mary raved about it, saying it was the best she'd ever
tasted. As Mary took seconds, Glenn, Dawn and her husband, Steve,
all chuckled to themselves, but no one told Mary it contained
venison. More than a decade later, Glenn can't stop thinking about
that night. "I really wish we'd respected Mary's desire not to eat
venison because maybe then she'd be alive today," he says. Mary
Riley, 43, died January 6, 2001 of sporadic CJD, a disease that
rarely strikes people as young as she was. Asks Glenn Riley: "Did
the venison kill Mary?"
When Riley began showing symptoms -- forgetting things, getting
irritable -- she and her husband both thought she was going through
the "change of life." They'd just opened a tavern on a lake near
Shawano, something they had long dreamed of, when Mary became
withdrawn. She wanted Glenn to stay home with her all the time. She
was afraid and clung to him. The second spinal tap suggested Mary
had CJD; the autopsy confirmed it.
"It took Mary real quick. Pretty soon, you could talk right in
front of her and she didn't even know it," says Glenn. He says he
came home one day and found Mary screaming at their son, the teen
pinned against the wall. "She was yelling and he was crying," says
Glenn. "That wasn't Mary. She didn't even know what she was doing."
For a while, after Mary started going mad, she'd be "in and out,
like Alzheimer's," says Glenn. But in a few months, they had to put
her in a nursing home. "In the beginning, Mary knew something was
wrong, but then she didn't even know what hit her," he says.
When Mary died, the "coroner refused to pronounce her dead. The
local funeral home wouldn't touch her," says Glenn. "I had to go
through Marshfield Clinic to get someone to come and pick her up.
They told me, 'You have to have her cremated.' " Glenn listed the
cause of death in Mary's obituary. Not long afterward, customers
came into the tavern telling Glenn a state health official on the
radio had said Mary didn't really die of CJD. But Glenn had the
autopsy report from Marshfield Clinic.
"Hearing that just devastated the guy," recalls his
brother-in-law, Rob Zaleski, a columnist at Madison's Capital
Times. Glenn asked Zaleski to find out what was going on.
Zaleski got a tape of Waupaca radio station WDUX's Jack Barry
interviewing Mary Proctor, then chief of the state Department of
Health's communicable disease epidemiology section. Proctor did seem
to ridicule the belief that Mary Riley had died of CJD. Zaleski says
when he called Proctor, she denied she'd been skeptical about Mary's
case. Proctor told him that the state didn't even monitor cases of
CJD, so she had no idea why Mary Riley died, but that "anyone can
write anything on a death notice, even that someone died of an
ingrown toenail."
Hearing that, Zaleski said, "You do sound skeptical." And, he
says, "Proctor snapped: 'This conversation is over, and if you quote
me, I'll sue.' " Zaleski wrote a column describing what had
occurred, even Proctor's threat and, he says, she tried to get him
fired. Zaleski played a tape of his Proctor interview for his boss,
who contacted the state and got an apology. Marshfield Clinic, whose
reputation Proctor had sullied, got one, too.
Like Kazmierczak, the man who says you can eat deer brains
without ever getting sick, Proctor was part of the state office
responsible for investigating possible links between CJD and chronic
wasting disease. It is up to the same office to refer cases to the
Atlanta-based CDC's special CJD investigation unit.
So is the CDC investigating Mary's case? "No," says Ermias Belay,
M.D., the CDC's top prion disease epidemiologist, because the state
hasn't asked it to. While many Wisconsinites assume that the CDC is
a pit bull looking for any suspicious cases of CJD, the agency waits
for people like Kazmierczak and Proctor to call. Mary Riley's
physician, Marshfield clinic neurologist Susan Mikel, says she would
never feed Wisconsin venison to her family and she's ready to call
CDC herself, particularly now that Steve, Mary's chili dinner
companion, seems to be developing the same symptoms.
 Jeff Schwan | July's
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel article did prod state officials
to ask CDC to investigate the cases of the three men who shared wild
game feasts. The two men the CDC is still investigating were 55 and
66 years old. But there's also Kevin Bass, a Minnesota hunter who
ate Barron County venison and died of CJD at 41. And there's Jeff
Schwan, whose Michigan Tech fraternity brothers used to bring
venison sausage back to the frat house. His mother, Terry, says that
in May 2001, Jeff, 26, began complaining about his vision. A friend
noticed misspellings in his e-mail, which was totally unlike him.
Jeff began losing weight. He became irritable and withdrawn. By the
end of June, he couldn't remember the four-digit code to open the
garage door or when and how to feed his parents' cats. At a family
gathering in July, he stuck to his parents and girlfriend, barely
talking. "On the night we took him to the hospital, he was speaking
like he was drunk or high and I noticed his pupils were so dilated I
couldn't see the irises," his mother says. By then, Jeff was no
longer able to do even simple things on his computer at work, and
"in the hospital, he couldn't drink enough water." When he died on
September 27, 2001, an autopsy confirmed he had sporadic CJD.
In 2000, Belay looked into three CJD cases reported by The
Denver Post, two hunters who ate meat from animals killed in
Wyoming and the daughter of a hunter who ate venison from a plant
that processed Colorado elk. All three died of CJD before they were
30 years old. The CDC asked the USDA to kill 1,000 deer and elk in
the area where the men hunted. Belay and others reported their
findings in the Archives of Neurology, writing that although
"circumstances suggested a link between the three cases and chronic
wasting disease, they could find no 'causal' link." Which means,
says Belay, "not a single one of those 1,000 deer tested positive
for CWD. For all we know, these cases may be CWD. What we have now
doesn't indicate a connection. That's reassuring, but it would be
wrong to say it will never happen."
So far, says NIH researcher Race, the two Wisconsin cases
pinpointed by the newspaper look like spontaneous CJD. "But we don't
know how CWD would look in human brains. It probably would look like
some garden-variety sporadic CJD." What the CDC will do with these
cases and four others (three from Colorado and Schwan from Upper
Michigan), Race says, is "sequence the prion protein from these
people, inject it into mice and wait to see what the disease looks
like in their brains. That will take two years."
CJD is so rare in people under age 30, one case in a billion
(leaving out medical mishaps), that four cases under 30 is "very
high," says Colorado neurologist Bosque. "Then, if you add these
other two from Wisconsin [cases in the newspaper], six cases of CJD
in people associated with venison is very, very high." Only now,
with Mary Riley, there are at least seven, and possibly eight, with
Steve, her dining companion. "It's not critical mass that matters,"
however, Belay says. "One case would do it for me." The chance that
two people who know each other would both contact CJD, like the two
Wisconsin sportsmen, is so unlikely, experts say, it would happen
only once in 140 years.
Given the incubation period for TSEs in humans, it may require
another generation to write the final chapter on CWD in Wisconsin.
"Does chronic wasting disease pass into humans? We'll be able to
answer that in 2022," says Race. Meanwhile, the state has become
part of an immense experiment.
"I would be absolutely shocked if this thing isn't all over the
state, and I think it's all over Iowa, Minnesota, Michigan and
northern Illinois, too," says author Stauber, "because that's how
widespread the feeding has been. It's just no one has tested enough
to find it." Inside state government, they're trying to remain
hopeful. Says Ruth E. Heike, DATCP assistant counsel and co-chair of
the CWD planning team: "Let me tell you, everyone on the science
team who believes in God is praying that we don't find it somewhere
else."
Mary Van de Kamp Nohl is a senior editor of Milwaukee
Magazine. |