Escherichia coli O157 infection on Scottish cattle farms: dynamics and control
Authored by Mark E J Woolhouse, Xu-Sheng Zhang
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2010.0470
Sponsors:
Wellcome Trust
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
In this study, we parametrize a stochastic individual-based model of the
transmission dynamics of Escherichia coli O157 infection among Scottish
cattle farms and use the model to predict the impacts of both targeted
and non-targeted interventions. We first generate distributions of model
parameter estimates using Markov chain Monte Carlo methods. Despite
considerable uncertainty in parameter values, each set of parameter
values within the 95th percentile range implies a fairly similar impact
of interventions. Interventions that reduce the transmission coefficient
and/or increase the recovery rate of infected farms (e.g. via
vaccination and biosecurity) are much more effective in reducing the
level of infection than reducing cattle movement rates, which improves
effectiveness only when the overall control effort is small. Targeted
interventions based on farm-level risk factors are more efficient than
non-targeted interventions. Herd size is a major determinant of risk of
infection, and our simulations confirmed that targeting interventions at
farms with the largest herds is almost as effective as targeting based
on overall risk. However, because of the striking characteristic that
the infection force depends weakly on the number of infected farms, no
interventions that are less than 100 per cent effective can eradicate E.
coli O157 infection from Scottish cattle farms, implying that
eliminating the disease is impractical.
Tags
movements
Model
Prevalence
Strategies
Vaccine
Food
Pathogens
Herd
Iii secreted proteins
Beef-cattle