KEY POINTS
  • America's swine and cattle populations are vulnerable to the deadly and highly contagious foot-and-mouth disease, and "efforts to prepare for a potential outbreak could be strengthened," according to a U.S. government watchdog.
  • The Government Accountability Office suggested that "efforts to prepare for a potential outbreak could be strengthened."
  • The agency warned an outbreak in the U.S. could lead to "serious economic impacts," including putting at risk some $19 billion in exports of meats and dairy products.
A cattle farm west of Surrey, England being investigated for a foot-and-mouth outbreak in August of 2007. A bigger epidemic struck Britain's agriculture industry in 2001.

LOS ANGELES — America's swine and cattle populations are vulnerable to the deadly and highly contagious foot-and-mouth disease, and "efforts to prepare for a potential outbreak could be strengthened," according to a U.S. government watchdog's new report.

The Government Accountability Office report said the U.S. Department of Agriculture "may not have a sufficient supply of FMD vaccine to control more than a small outbreak because of limited resources to obtain vaccine." It also said an epidemic could prove costly to the nation's livestock industry and the federal government.