Avoid sheep if you're pregnant - Public health notice

Sherlock

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I checked with admin and am posting this across all 3 tris so everyone can see it hopefully :)

As spring is in the air and lambing season is happening, I know a fair few people may visit places where they come into contact with lambs and ewes. Be it petting zoos, farms, animal centres, walking across sheep filled fields and so on. Living on a farm I am aware of the risks and have avoided close contact with them during lambing and will continue to do so till I give birth, but thought other women might find it of interest to know about the risks if pregnant

Advice to pregnant women during lambing

Pregnant women should avoid close contact with sheep during the lambing season, Scotland's Chief Medical Officer Harry Burns advised today.

In particular they should:
not help to lamb or milk ewes
avoid contact with aborted or new born lambs or with the afterbirth
where possible, avoid handling clothing and boots that have come into contact with ewes of lambs, or if they must wear rubber gloves


Outlining the risks, Dr Burns said:

"Pregnant women who come into close contact with sheep during lambing may be risking their health and the health of their unborn child. This is because infections such as chlamydiosis (enzootic abortion of ewes - EAE), toxoplasmosis and listeriosis - all common causes of abortion in ewes - can be passed on to them.

"While the number of reported infections and human miscarriages resulting from contact with sheep is extremely small, pregnant women need to be aware of the potential risks.

"If they do become ill - experience fever or influenza-like symptoms, and are concerned that they could have acquired infection from a farm environment, they should seek immediate medical advice."

Farmers have a responsibility to minimise the risks to pregnant women, including members of their family, the public and professional staff visiting farms. Any action should be determined by their risk assessment required under the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health (COSHH) Regulations 2002 and the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999.

If a ewe aborts, farmers are advised to ask their veterinary surgeon to take a sample to their local Veterinary Investigation Centre to determine the cause. In the interests of hygiene, farmers should dispose of all afterbirths promptly and safely via an approved route such as rendering or incineration.

Farmers should consult their veterinary surgeon about suitable vaccination programmes and any other disease control measures in sheep.

The Control of Substances Hazardous to Health (COSHH) Regulations 2002 require employers to assess risks to health from harmful substances, including micro-organisms, and to take steps to prevent or control those risks. The Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 require employers to further assess any risks which affect pregnant women.

Further advice is available from Employment Medical Advisory Service offices, which are listed under the Health and Safety Executive in the telephone directory.

The Department of Health advisory leaflet, While you are pregnant: How to avoid infection from food and from contact with animals, is available, free of charge to general medical practitioners and midwives from: The Scottish Government Health Department, Public Health Division, Branch 1, 3E(S), St Andrews House, Edinburgh, EH1 3DG.

Further information is also available in the 1997 publication Infection risks to new and expectant mothers in the workplace - a guide for employers, by the Advisory Committee on Dangerous Pathogens (ref: ISBN 0-7176-1360-7). Copies are available, price £10.50, from HSE Books, PO Box 1999, Sudbury, Suffolk, CO10 6FS or by calling 01787 881165, or via their website at http://www.hsebooks.co.uk

Article taken from here

BBC article from 2001 on the same thing


Goes without saying that washing of hands and shoes etc if having had any contact round sheep and lambs is a good thing :)
 
You can tell I live in the middle of nowhere in the Lake District. First thing my midwife wrote on my notes was "No cat poo, no lambing" !

Didn't have much intention to go and see the sheep anyway but at least I know. Maybe they just don't tell people in urban areas?! xxx
 
debecca said:
Didn't have much intention to go and see the sheep anyway but at least I know. Maybe they just don't tell people in urban areas?! xxx

They should, you would hope they would anyways. I know quite a few schools, parents and so on organise trips to see lambs. Or have them brought in. Same with petting zoos this time of year. Contact with shoes that have trodden ground round ewes and lambs is considered a risk, so its good pregnant women are informed.
 
Sherlock said:
debecca said:
Didn't have much intention to go and see the sheep anyway but at least I know. Maybe they just don't tell people in urban areas?! xxx

They should, you would hope they would anyways. I know quite a few schools, parents and so on organise trips to see lambs. Or have them brought in. Same with petting zoos this time of year. Contact with shoes that have trodden ground round ewes and lambs is considered a risk, so its good pregnant women are informed.

I agree and I think you've done absolutely the right thing raising awareness of this... I was just trying to justify why some healthworkers perhaps wouldn't think to mention it?

Who'd have thought ickle baby lambs could be so dangerous? :twisted:
 
debecca said:
I agree and I think you've done absolutely the right thing raising awareness of this... I was just trying to justify why some healthworkers perhaps wouldn't think to mention it?

Who'd have thought ickle baby lambs could be so dangerous? :twisted:

If it helps one women become informed then it has to be a good thing :) No healthworker told me thats for sure. But you would hope they would inform women :roll: I doubt its a mandatory thing.

I know, they look so adorable but alas can cause such problems :? :cry:

Always next year for those of us PG now to enjoy them :) If I wasn't PG now I'd be in the lambing shed and would be completly hands on and helping lamb and muck out and everything. As it is all I can do is stand outside the barriers and coo at all the baby lambs. Then come in and take my boots off, scrub my hands and leave the boots out in the porch and take care to not touch the soles etc. I wash my hands every time I go outside and put boots on or take them off and I've not gone actually into the enclousures or touched any ground where lambs were born :roll:
 
:shock: :shock: :shock: :shock: :shock:

I took Beth to the little farm with me the other day and theres loads of sheep there :shock:

I stroked a couple, but i washed my hands really really well aftwerwards....(goes into panic mode.... :shock: )
 
Well I helped with lambing (delivering and feeding) while I was pregnant and had no ill effects on me or Arianna.

It is just a case of common sence to wash hands, etc properly, and if a lamb aborts that there was clearly a problem so get someone else to continue.
 
SarahH said:
Well I helped with lambing (delivering and feeding) while I was pregnant and had no ill effects on me or Arianna.

It is just a case of common sence to wash hands, etc properly, and if a lamb aborts that there was clearly a problem so get someone else to continue.

It is, but as so many people are not aware it can't hurt they are informed and can at least make a choice as to if they stay right away or visit but take extra precautions. If boots are considered a risk a person might want to disinfect them when getting home for example. Those that farm might be clued up, but many others possibly are not.

Farmers have a responsibility to ensure they minimise the risks to women who are pregnant. You choosing to continue to lamb was I figure at your own risk. That's fair enough if thats the case, but you hopefully were able to make an informed choice. My posting this info was so other PG women can do the same.

Alas a farming friend of mine knows of a woman who lost her baby this way. It can and does happen, so its worthwhile just having the info out there :)
 
Sherlock said:
SarahH said:
Well I helped with lambing (delivering and feeding) while I was pregnant and had no ill effects on me or Arianna.

It is just a case of common sence to wash hands, etc properly, and if a lamb aborts that there was clearly a problem so get someone else to continue.

It is, but as so many people are not aware it can't hurt they are informed and can at least make a choice as to if they stay right away or visit but take extra precautions. If boots are considered a risk a person might want to disinfect them when getting home for example. Those that farm might be clued up, but many others possibly are not.

Farmers have a responsibility to ensure they minimise the risks to women who are pregnant. You choosing to continue to lamb was I figure at your own risk. That's fair enough if thats the case, but you hopefully were able to make an informed choice. My posting this info was so other PG women can do the same.

Alas a farming friend of mine knows of a woman who lost her baby this way. It can and does happen, so its worthwhile just having the info out there :)

Oh I wasn't saying it to cause upset.... just that I think it's all down to common sence... like some people say stay completely away from cats where in reality you just have to be extra careful and wear gloves and masks when changing their litter.

Sorry for your friend that lost her LO :cry:
 
sazzylou said:
I stroked a couple, but i washed my hands really really well aftwerwards....(goes into panic mode.... :shock: )

Don't panic. If you washed your hands well afterwards thats good :) :hug: Its the one big precaution and you took it so please don't fret.

It is a small risk, but more so if hands on when ewes are actually giving birth and so on as the info explained, so please don't worry overly. I'm around the sheep sheds (just avoiding contact), the sheep dogs, walk through the farmyard and so on and each time I come in I leave my boots in the porch and wash my hands throughly.

Many things when PG are considered a risk of some sort. I'm sure we all come across things we don't realise about and plough on, only to find out afterwards and worry a bit. But most of the time, things are just fine :)
 
SarahH said:
Oh I wasn't saying it to cause upset.... just that I think it's all down to common sence... like some people say stay completely away from cats where in reality you just have to be extra careful and wear gloves and masks when changing their litter.

Sorry for your friend that lost her LO :cry:

It is down to common sense, and luckily most people have that and do wash hands and so on. Just some would prefer to avoid the situation completly if they know, while others will visit but keep their distance etc.

So many blooming things to worry about when PG aren't there :roll: :wall: The cat thing would worry me more tbh, if I had cats here. No cats as there are sheep so that solved that one!

And thank you. My friend was telling me about it the other day and he himself was upset and reminded me for about the hundredth time this lambing season to not touch the sheep. Bless him. Wasn't on his farm it happened but in a farming community everyone knows everyone, so it has made an impact.
 
Sherlock said:
sazzylou said:
I stroked a couple, but i washed my hands really really well aftwerwards....(goes into panic mode.... :shock: )

Don't panic. If you washed your hands well afterwards thats good :) :hug: Its the one big precaution and you took it so please don't fret.

Many things when PG are considered a risk of some sort. I'm sure we all come across things we don't realise about and plough on, only to find out afterwards and worry a bit. But most of the time, things are just fine :)

I am a worrier...if theres something to worry about, i'll worry about it, lol :roll:

There were no little lambs around and the sheep were all fenced off so we wernt even treading in their poo or anything....

I went about a week ago anyway , and my baby is still trying to destroy me from the inside :twisted: so im sure all is well! 8)
 
sazzylou said:
I am a worrier...if theres something to worry about, i'll worry about it, lol :roll:

There were no little lambs around and the sheep were all fenced off so we wernt even treading in their poo or anything....

I went about a week ago anyway , and my baby is still trying to destroy me from the inside :twisted: so im sure all is well! 8)

Awwww :hug: :hug: I do worry also about things more being PG but my main worries are more based on the medical profession, induction and medical intervention when in labour. I lose sleep over that stuff :wall:

I'm sure everything is fine :) Sounds like your LO is like mine, playing football with your insides :roll: :lol:
 
My midwife has never mentioned sheep and I like in a rural-ish area. Not a fan of sheep anyway, they look sinister!
 
Cows are worse. They march at you in a big herd and moo! :shock:
 

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