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Doc
Keeper of the Scrolls


2010 Posts
Posted -  16/09/2005  :  01:04

Plague-Infected Mice Missing From N.J. Lab

Officials Concerned, but Say Public Health Risk Is Low

Sept. 15, 2005 — Authorities are investigating the disappearance from a New Jersey bioterror research lab of at least three mice carrying a deadly strain of plague.

Sources say FBI agents and bioterrorism experts have interviewed and polygraphed employees at the University of Medicine and Dentistry in Newark, N.J., the location of the lab run by the Public Health Research Institute, a leading center for research on infectious diseases.

The mice have been missing for approximately two weeks.

"The FBI responded to the matter, and we dedicated a great number of agents as well as a large number of resources to the investigation," said Special Agent Steve Siegel, a spokesman for the FBI's Newark field office.

"We're satisfied that there is no public safety risk, and there doesn't seem to be any nexus to criminal activity or terrorism," he added.


Lax Procedures?

Nevertheless, federal authorities, including the FBI, have criticized the lab for lax procedures that resulted in a potential public health menace.

Officials discovered two weeks ago a failure to account for three of 24 mice that had been injected with a bacterium that causes various forms of the plague, including bubonic plague, inside the high-security facility located in the middle of the city of Newark.

The injections were part of an experiment testing potential treatments for the plague, according to The Star-Ledger of Newark, which first reported the story in today's editions.

The discovery that three of the mice were missing led to a full investigation by the FBI Joint Terror Task Force, and an ongoing investigation into the lab's safeguards by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, federal sources said.

One employee of the lab was fired nearly two weeks ago.

The investigation included polygraph tests and extensive interviews with all employees of the lab who had access to the three cages where the mice were kept.

Investigators concluded that lab employees failed to properly account for the mice. They believe that when the mice in two of the three cages died, lab workers failed to properly search the cages' bedding before it was incinerated and the mice were packed for biohazard disposal.

The other mice, which survived the exposure to the plague bacterium, also were destroyed after the completion of this phase of the test. They and their bedding also were not properly safeguarded, the investigators found.

An official at the Public Health Research Institute did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

No Evidence of Human Infection


Investigators still do not know what happened to the three missing mice.

There is a very slim chance that the mice were able to escape the facility, investigators said. If they did, sources involved in the case estimated their time of survival and potential transmission of the disease at three days.

Surveys of hospitals in Newark, where the lab is located, have turned up no evidence of human infection.

"We don't have any indication there's a public health threat," said Von Roebuck, a spokesman for the CDC. "We're basing that on the fact that we've had no reports of the plague in the area."

If human cases of plague do turn up — as they sometimes do naturally in the wild — countermeasures will be taken, Roebuck added. If diagnosed early, for instance, bubonic plague can be treated with antibiotics.

But regardless of the health threat in this case, Stephen Albert Johnson, director for the Center for Innovations in Medicine at Arizona State University's Biodesign Institute, said the missing mice incident raises questions about increased federal bioterror prevention research.

"Risk [from the missing mice] is low, but this is a very bad incident in regard of control," Johnson said. "One of the implications of our bringing a lot more people and money in to work on threat agents is that more of these types of incidents are likely to happen."

Researchers in federal bioterror facilities already are given background checks and have to go through an approval process for safety and security protocols, Roebuck said. In addition, the CDC conducts site visits to ensure labs are secure and following protocol.

In addition, Roebuck added, the CDC continues to investigate the missing mice to determine what, if anything, can be done to avoid a repeat of the incident.

ABC News' Pierre Thomas, Richard Esposito, Roger Sergel and Michael S. James contributed to this report.

Author Replies  
Callunna
Revolving Grey Blob


3044 Posts
Posted - 16/09/2005 : 13:13
I wonder if the plague makes these 3 mice go blind?

In which case, we should see how they run, whether they run after the farmer's wife, and whether she'll be able to cut off their tails with a carving knife.

Is this one of those scare stories put out by the US government to divert attention from the real issues, such as their appalling response to Katrina, or the events in Iraq?

Is it on a par with that flesh-eating bug scare about 10 years ago which was set to wipe out the entire human race? Or is it actually true? If it WAS true, I'm certain they wouldn't publicise it at all.

Or am I being gormless, and I've missed the point completely?Go to Top of Page

melteaser
Genealogist


4819 Posts
Posted - 16/09/2005 : 13:15

Cally my first thoughts that there is no way they would go public over something like this. I heard it on the radio this morning. Maybe they are trying diversion tactics?




Mel


http://www.briercliffesociety.co.uk Go to Top of Page
roopakvaidya
Regular Member


233 Posts
Posted - 17/09/2005 : 01:37

It doesn't say who found out that they were missing... nor who reported them missing to the FBI. Animal rights activists are the only ones likely to have done so. Or is that too cynical a view?

Maybe the poor mice just died of mistreatment and plague?

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Callunna
Revolving Grey Blob


3044 Posts
Posted - 19/09/2005 : 21:44
Yes, that's too cynical. One cannot make such assumptions without knowing the real facts, which in this case are probably well hidden from the likes of us :–)

Go to Top of Page

Stanley
Local Historian & Old Fart


36804 Posts
Posted - 20/09/2005 : 04:20
Ask Elaine what the things to worry about are.....  One thing is certain, mice wouldn't rank very high on her red alert scale.


Stanley Challenger Graham




Barlick View
stanley at barnoldswick.freeserve.co.uk Go to Top of Page
Marcia
Senior Member


1096 Posts
Posted - 20/09/2005 : 11:26

Bubonic plague is already loose in the US in any case and has been encroaching on population centres for years, so quite why this is news is beyond me :)  I would imagine it's quite true and very likely that they were experimenting on the mice to try and find a cure precisely because there is a plague problem in the US.

It's quite likely that large portions of the US are unaware of the plague problem, I suppose - it's not like Faux News is likely to make it public or no-one would visit the National Parks :)



Edited by - Marcia on 20 September 2005 11:33:32


- Marcia Allass (http://www.sequentialtart.com)Go to Top of Page
Marcia
Senior Member


1096 Posts
Posted - 20/09/2005 : 11:31

Bubonic plague incidents in Texas: http://www.lovehealth.org/books/plague.htm

In New Mexico: http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2002-11-07-nm-couple-bubonic-plague_x.htm

In California: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/archive/2005/August/26/local/stories/03local.htm

"Does plague occur naturally?
Yes. The World Health Organization reports 1,000 to 3,000 cases of plague worldwide every year. An average of 5 to 15 cases occur each year in the western United States. These cases are usually scattered and occur in rural to semi-rural areas. Most cases are of the bubonic form of the disease. Naturally occurring pneumonic plague is uncommon, although small outbreaks do occur. Both types of plague are readily controlled by standard public health response measures. " From http://www.bt.cdc.gov/agent/plague/faq.asp

National Park Service info sheet: http://www.nps.gov/public_health/inter/info/factsheets/fs_plague.htm




Edited by - Marcia on 20 September 2005 11:40:04


- Marcia Allass (http://www.sequentialtart.com)Go to Top of Page


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