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             25/07/07           
              The Badger Trust has welcomed the latest bovine TB statistics,
                which reveal that more TB testing is finding more TB-infected
                herds. However, the Badger Trust is concerned that not enough
                use is being made of the gamma interferon TB test, with the
                result that a significant number of infected cattle have yet
              to be found. 
              
              
            Trevor Lawson from the Badger Trust commented: "The important
              observation is that TB appears to be starting to plateau out.
              However, we understand that the Government is still a long way
              short of its target of 50,000 gamma interferon TB tests for 2007
              and efforts on that front have to be stepped up. As we have repeatedly
              warned, better testing will mean the discovery of more hidden TB
              in the short term. But in the medium term that will be of benefit
              to the majority of farmers, particularly in TB hotspots, whose
              cattle are unaffected by the disease and who want to minimise the
            risk of acquiring the infection from cattle in neighbouring herds. 
            "We also want to see the Government improve on its TB controls
              by using Geographical Information Systems (GIS) to map all the
              holdings of infected farms so that all possible contiguous herds
              are tested for TB. EU inspectors have warned that state vets
              have inadequate information about the movement of cattle between
              different parcels of the same holding and this poses a major risk
            of herd-to- herd spread." 
              MP Raises Concerns Over Growing Rate of Bovine TB 
  Badger Trust Warns Vet's Evidence Based on Anecdote 
  Way Open for Effective Badger Control Strategies 
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