Whilst there was considerable expertise amongst its members there were no experts from overseas.
The Tyrrell Report said “Most importantly we seek reassurance that the Southwood group was correct in their belief that this disease could not have implications for human health, say through food, through occupational exposure (4 farmers have died of vCJD) or through medicinal products that use bovine ingredients.”
You might have expected Watson and his fellow committee members to have been jumping up and down demanding that stringent safeguards be put in place to protect human health immediately. Instead, The Tyrrell Report proposed a “Comprehensive package of research on the epidemiology, transmissibility and diagnosis of BSE.”
This is despite the fact that, as the respected microbiologist Professor Richard Lacey had already pointed out: "SPONGIFORM ENCEPHALOPATHIES ARE GENERALLY TRANSMISSIBLE."
This scientific knowledge had been in the hands of officials and ministers since the earliest days (see Margaret Thatcher).
The Committee must have had concerns over transmissibility to humans. Why else would they commission the research?
Why ban offal from baby food and then later seek to remove it from the food chain as they did with the offal ban on November 8th 1989 (this was not effective see Colin MacLean) if the disease could not be transmitted to humans?
And why, when the offal ban was in place, did they give the British people complete reassurance, based on the assumption that the risk of BSE had disappeared as if by magic?
The Tyrrell Committee took time.. lots of it. While it deliberated, the beef trade was churning out MRM (mechanically recovered meat) containing the most toxic levels of BSE which continued to be fed to our babies, infants and school children.
BSE as a deadly disease should have always been assumed to be transmissible - toxic until proven safe - and the necessary precautions put in place at the earliest stages. Instead, a committee was formed and proposals were put to the Government which failed to implement many of its recommendations. The Government its ministers and officials seemed to prefer to use old and other advice that was more suitable for their shaky policy. In the meantime the meat industry continued to churn out potentially deadly food products for consumption by an unsuspecting British public.
The report was published in June 1989.…Andy was nearly six and was a very affectionate little boy, he had joined a judo class and was learning to play the drums.
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