by jorge » Mon Oct 08, 2007 4:03 pm
Hi Isaac,
Thanks for your first hand information about the drum maker with anthrax in 2006. I do not know Vado Diomande personally, but got the personal information about him from someone who does. I would actually like to meet him, he is an amazing person, having survived inhalation anthrax, recovered completely, and gone back to drumming, stilt dancing, and his rigorous performing schedule.
Just a couple of points of information about anthrax that would be helpful for readers of this forum to know. It is transmitted to humans from hides, hair, or wool from an animal that had anthrax infection (usually cutaneous) before being slaughtered. The hides do not get infected by spores from the ground. Herbivorous animals do get infected by eating grasses and plants contaminated with spores on land that is contaminated from previous infected animals, but humans get infected from infected animals, not from the ground.
Molds/fungi are a competely different kind of organism from bacteria, and certain fungi can sometimes cause disease in humans, but fungi are unrelated to the anthrax bacteria.
Most (80%) human cases of anthrax are from goat, and while cows can get infected as well, cow hide is even much more rarely a source of human anthrax infection than goat hide, hair, or wool. I have not heard of a case of muleskin being contaminated, but I guess it is theoretically possible.
In Vado Diomande's case, his noticing that the cowhide was moldy does not mean that he got infected from that cowhide. While the incubation period can rarely be as short as a day, it is usually about a week, and people generally don't perceive the exposure to the spores. He probably perceived the odor of mold or mildew, and associated that with the infection.
Bottom line for us is that anthrax transmission to humans by contaminated animal hides is so exceedingly rare that we as drummers and drum makers in the US, Europe. or Australia don't need to even think about it. Although some people believe that they are excessively restrictive, the quarantine laws reduce the risk even more. Maybe I shouldn't have even raised the topic, but I do think it is worthwhile for each of us to have scientifically accurate information since we often get second or third hand information that may be misleading, such as that keeping animal hides in the freezer for a few weeks at -4 degrees C kills all bacteria. It might kill your marriage, but it won't reliably kill all the bacteria, and it might even contaminate food with some other nasty organisms.