There were however, three civil servants attached to the committee, it was their job to advise on Government policy. They were:
- Mr J Wilesmith a vet employed by the Ministry of Agriculture (MAFF)
- Dr H Pickles from the Department of Health (see list )
- Mr A J Lawrence for the Ministry of Agriculture (MAFF)
The Southwood Committee recommendations were:
- To propose a ban on animal cannibalised feed from July 18 1988. (years later farmers were still using old feed)
- A proposal to set up another committee.
The Southwood Committee declared that “A reduction of incidence (BSE) would follow with a very low incidence in 1996 and the subsequent disappearance of the disease” yet twenty years later in 2008 DEFRAS website admits that three of four cows a week are still being tested for clinical BSE. The Southwood Report was eventually submitted to Ministers on 9th February 1989. It concluded that it was “most unlikely that BSE would have any implications for human health”. The Committee said that “mad cows disease” was a “dead end host” and "would not jump the barrier to another species." (namely man).
In the years which followed this opinion was fed to an unsuspecting British public as fact, and consumers continued to be exposed to sources of BSE. Consultant Medical Microbiologist Dr Stephen Dealler had warned the Government about the threat to human health but his advice was ignored and his research blocked. In February Dr Dealler told me “THE WORRY IS THAT THERE ARE PLENTY INFECTED PEOPLE OUT THERE WHO HAVE NO SYMPTOMS YET.“
So how many cases are going to develop? No one can say for sure but an anonymous recovery of 12,674 tonsils and appendix found that three showed signs of vCJD. (Researchers Plymouth Derriford Hospital, CJD Surveillance unit, Journal of Pathology). Professor Collinge told me “ONE IN A THOUSAND OF THE UK POPULATION COULD BE CARRYING vCJD“ (March 22nd 2008)
In 1988 my son Andy was five and had just started school. He had his childhood vaccines and sat down to a school dinners every day of the week. He loved swimming and never sat still. He was full of enthusiasm and full of life.
Professor Southwood became Vice Chancellor of Oxford University
Sir John Walton became a Lord
Professor Epstein was knighted.