Vaccination against foot-and-mouth disease I: Epidemiological consequences
Authored by J A Backer, T J Hagenaars, G Nodelijk, Roermund H J W van
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2012.05.012
Sponsors:
Netherlands Ministries
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
An epidemic of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) can have devastating effects
on animal welfare, economic revenues, the export position and society as
a whole, as occurred during the 2001 FMD epidemic in the Netherlands.
Following the preemptive culling of 260,000 animals during this
outbreak, the Dutch government adopted emergency vaccination as
preferred control policy. However, a vaccination-to-live strategy has
not been applied before, posing unprecedented challenges for effectively
controlling the epidemic, regaining FMD-free status and minimizing
economic losses. These three topics are covered in an interdisciplinary
model analysis. In this first part we evaluate whether and how emergency
vaccination can be effectively applied to control FMD epidemics in the
Netherlands. For this purpose we develop a stochastic individual-based
model that describes FMD virus transmission between animals and between
herds, taking heterogeneity between host species (cattle, sheep and
pigs) into account. Our results in a densely populated livestock area
with >4 farms/km(2) show that emergency ring vaccination can halt the
epidemic as rapidly as preemptive ring culling, while the total number
of farms to be culled is reduced by a factor of four. To achieve this
reduction a larger control radius around detected farms and a
corresponding adequate vaccination capacity is needed. Although
sufficient for the majority of simulated epidemics with a 2 km
vaccination zone, the vaccination capacity available in the Netherlands
can be exhausted by pig farms that are on average ten times larger than
cattle herds. Excluding pig farms from vaccination slightly increases
the epidemic, but more than halves the number of animals to be
vaccinated. Hobby flocks - modelled as small-sized sheep flocks - do not
play a significant role in propagating the epidemic, and need not be
targeted during the control phase. In a more sparsely populated
livestock area in the Netherlands with about 2 farms/km(2) the minimal
control strategy of culling only detected farms seems sufficient to
control an epidemic. (c) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
outbreak
Strategies
Virus transmission
Great-britain
Pigs
Emergency vaccination
Contact
transmission
Clinical variation
Fmd epidemic
Dairy-cows