Comparison of alternatives to passive surveillance to detect foot and mouth disease incursions in Victoria, Australia
Autor: | Hoa Thi Minh Nguyen, M. G. Garner, Tom Kompas, Iain J. East, Pham Van Ha, S.E. Roche |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Veterinary medicine Victoria 040301 veterinary sciences Swine 030106 microbiology Early detection Cattle Diseases Sheep Diseases Disease Disease Outbreaks 0403 veterinary science 03 medical and health sciences Food Animals Environmental health Medicine Animals Probability Swine Diseases Goat Diseases Sheep Foot-and-mouth disease business.industry Simulation modelling Goats Outbreak 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences Gold standard (test) medicine.disease Milk Foot-and-Mouth Disease Population Surveillance Epidemiological Monitoring Epidemiological surveillance Herd Animal Science and Zoology Cattle business |
Zdroj: | Preventive veterinary medicine. 128 |
ISSN: | 1873-1716 |
Popis: | This study aimed to evaluate strategies to enhance the early detection of foot and mouth disease incursions in Australia. Two strategies were considered. First, improving the performance of the current passive surveillance system. Second, supplementing the current passive system with active surveillance strategies based on testing animals at saleyards or through bulk milk testing of dairy herds. Simulation modelling estimated the impact of producer education and awareness by either increasing the daily probability that a farmer will report the presence of diseased animals or by reducing the proportion of the herd showing clinical signs required to trigger a disease report. Both increasing the probability of reporting and reducing the proportion of animals showing clinical signs resulted in incremental decreases in the time to detection, the size and the duration of the outbreak. A gold standard system in which all producers reported the presence of disease once 10% of the herd showed clinical signs reduced the median time to detection of the outbreak from 20 to 15days, the duration of the subsequent outbreak from 53 to 42days and the number of infected farms from 46 to 32. Bulk milk testing reduced the median time to detection by two days and the number of infected farms by six but had no impact on the duration of the outbreak. Screening of animals at saleyards provided no improvement over the current passive surveillance system alone while having significant resource issues. It is concluded that the most effective way to achieve early detection of incursions of foot and mouth disease into Victoria, Australia is to invest in improving producer reporting. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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