21 results on '"McInerney JP"'
Search Results
2. Welfare of badgers (Meles meles) subjected to culling: patterns of trap-related injury
- Author
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Woodroffe, R, primary, Bourne, FJ, additional, Cox, DR, additional, Donnelly, CA, additional, Gettinby, G, additional, McInerney, JP, additional, and Morrison, WI, additional
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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3. The prevalence, distribution and severity of detectable pathological lesions in badgers naturally infected with Mycobacterium bovis.
- Author
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Jenkins HE, Morrison WI, Cox DR, Donnelly CA, Johnston WT, Bourne FJ, Clifton-Hadley RS, Gettinby G, McInerney JP, Watkins GH, Woodroffe R, Jenkins, H E, Morrison, W I, Cox, D R, Donnelly, C A, Johnston, W T, Bourne, F J, Clifton-Hadley, R S, Gettinby, G, and McInerney, J P
- Abstract
The Randomized Badger Culling Trial (RBCT) began in 1998 to determine the impact of badger culling in controlling bovine tuberculosis in cattle. A total of 1166 badgers (14% of total) proactively culled during the RBCT were found to be tuberculous, offering a unique opportunity to study the pathology caused by Mycobacterium bovis in a large sample of badgers. Of these, 39% of adults (approximately 6% of all adults culled) had visible lesions (detectable at necropsy) of bovine tuberculosis; cubs had a lower prevalence of infection (9%) but a higher percentage of tuberculous cubs (55.5%) had visible lesions. Only approximately 1% of adult badgers had extensive, severe pathology. Tuberculous badgers with recorded bite wounds (approximately 5%) had a higher prevalence of visible lesions and a different distribution of lesions, suggesting transmission via bite wounds. However, the predominance of lesions in the respiratory tract indicates that most transmission occurs by the respiratory route. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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4. Curved boundaries and chiral instabilities - two sources of twist in homeotropic nematic tori.
- Author
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McInerney JP, Ellis PW, Rocklin DZ, Fernandez-Nieves A, and Matsumoto EA
- Abstract
Many liquid crystalline systems display spontaneous breaking of achiral symmetry, as achiral molecules aggregate into large chiral domains. In confined cylinders with homeotropic boundary conditions, chromonic liquid crystals - which have a twist elastic modulus which is at least an order of magnitude less than their splay and bend counter parts - adopt a twisted escaped radial texture (TER) to minimize their free energy, whilst 5CB - which has all three elastic constants roughly comparable - does not. In a recent series of experiments, we have shown that 5CB confined to tori and bent cylindrical capillaries with homeotropic boundary conditions also adopts a TER structure resulting from the curved nature of the confining boundaries [P. W. Ellis et al., Phys. Rev. Lett., 2018, 247803]. We shall call this microscopic twist, as the twisted director organization not only depends on the confinement geometry but also on the values of elastic moduli. Additionally, we demonstrate theoretically that the curved geometry of the boundary induces a twist in the escaped radial (ER) texture. Moving the escaped core of the structure towards the center of the torus not only lowers the splay and bend energies, but lowers the energetic cost of this distinct source for twist that we shall call geometric twist. As the torus becomes more curved, the ideal location for the escaped core approaches the inner radius of the torus.
- Published
- 2019
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5. Curvature-Induced Twist in Homeotropic Nematic Tori.
- Author
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Ellis PW, Nayani K, McInerney JP, Rocklin DZ, Park JO, Srinivasarao M, Matsumoto EA, and Fernandez-Nieves A
- Abstract
We confine a nematic liquid crystal with homeotropic anchoring to stable toroidal droplets and study how geometry affects the equilibrium director configuration. In contrast to the case of cylindrical confinement, we find that the equilibrium state is chiral-a twisted and escaped radial director configuration. Furthermore, we find that the magnitude of the twist distortion increases as the ratio of the ring radius to the tube radius decreases; we confirm this with computer simulations of optically polarized microscopy textures. In addition, numerical calculations also indicate that the local geometry indeed affects the magnitude of the twist distortion. We further confirm this curvature-induced twisting using bent cylindrical capillaries.
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- 2018
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6. Herd-level risk factors of bovine tuberculosis in England and Wales after the 2001 foot-and-mouth disease epidemic.
- Author
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Johnston WT, Vial F, Gettinby G, Bourne FJ, Clifton-Hadley RS, Cox DR, Crea P, Donnelly CA, McInerney JP, Mitchell AP, Morrison WI, and Woodroffe R
- Subjects
- Animals, Case-Control Studies, Cattle, Data Collection, England epidemiology, Epidemics veterinary, Female, Incidence, Logistic Models, Male, Risk Factors, Tuberculosis, Bovine transmission, Wales epidemiology, Animal Husbandry methods, Disease Reservoirs, Foot-and-Mouth Disease epidemiology, Mustelidae microbiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine epidemiology
- Abstract
Objectives: We present the results of a 2005 case-control study of bovine tuberculosis (bTB) breakdowns in English and Welsh herds. The herd management, farming practices, and environmental factors of 401 matched pairs of case and control herds were investigated to provide a picture of herd-level risk factors in areas of varying bTB incidence., Methods: A global conditional logistic regression model, with region-specific variants, was used to compare case herds that had experienced a confirmed bTB breakdown to contemporaneous control herds matched on region, herd type, herd size, and parish testing interval., Results: Contacts with cattle from contiguous herds and sourcing cattle from herds with a recent history of bTB were associated with an increased risk in both the global and regional analyses. Operating a farm over several premises, providing cattle feed inside the housing, and the presence of badgers were also identified as significantly associated with an increased bTB risk., Conclusions: Steps taken to minimize cattle contacts with neighboring herds and altering trading practices could have the potential to reduce the size of the bTB epidemic. In principle, limiting the interactions between cattle and wildlife may also be useful; however this study did not highlight any specific measures to implement., (Copyright © 2011 International Society for Infectious Diseases. All rights reserved.)
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- 2011
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7. Social group size affects Mycobacterium bovis infection in European badgers (Meles meles).
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Woodroffe R, Donnelly CA, Wei G, Cox DR, Bourne FJ, Burke T, Butlin RK, Cheeseman CL, Gettinby G, Gilks P, Hedges S, Jenkins HE, Johnston WT, McInerney JP, Morrison WI, and Pope LC
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- Animals, Behavior, Animal, Body Weight, Ecosystem, Female, Host-Pathogen Interactions, Male, Population Dynamics, Prevalence, Time Factors, Mustelidae, Mycobacterium bovis, Social Behavior, Tuberculosis veterinary
- Abstract
1. In most social animals, the prevalence of directly transmitted pathogens increases in larger groups and at higher population densities. Such patterns are predicted by models of Mycobacterium bovis infection in European badgers (Meles meles). 2. We investigated the relationship between badger abundance and M. bovis prevalence, using data on 2696 adult badgers in 10 populations sampled at the start of the Randomized Badger Culling Trial. 3. M. bovis prevalence was consistently higher at low badger densities and in small social groups. M. bovis prevalence was also higher among badgers whose genetic profiles suggested that they had immigrated into their assigned social groups. 4. The association between high M. bovis prevalence and small badger group size appeared not to have been caused by previous small-scale culling in study areas, which had been suspended, on average, 5 years before the start of the current study. 5. The observed pattern of prevalence might occur through badgers in smaller groups interacting more frequently with members of neighbouring groups; detailed behavioural data are needed to test this hypothesis. Likewise, longitudinal data are needed to determine whether the size of infected groups might be suppressed by disease-related mortality. 6. Although M. bovis prevalence was lower at high population densities, the absolute number of infected badgers was higher. However, this does not necessarily mean that the risk of M. bovis transmission to cattle is highest at high badger densities, since transmission risk depends on badger behaviour as well as on badger density.
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- 2009
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8. Bovine tuberculosis in cattle and badgers in localized culling areas.
- Author
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Woodroffe R, Donnelly CA, Cox DR, Gilks P, Jenkins HE, Johnston WT, Le Fevre AM, Bourne FJ, Cheeseman CL, Clifton-Hadley RS, Gettinby G, Hewinson RG, McInerney JP, Mitchell AP, Morrison WI, and Watkins GH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, Disease Reservoirs microbiology, Disease Reservoirs veterinary, Female, Incidence, Male, Mycobacterium bovis isolation & purification, Risk Factors, United Kingdom, Disease Outbreaks veterinary, Mustelidae microbiology, Population Control methods, Tuberculosis, Bovine epidemiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine transmission
- Abstract
Bovine tuberculosis (TB) is a zoonotic disease that can have serious consequences for cattle farming and, potentially, for public health. In Britain, failure to control bovine TB has been linked to persistent infection of European badger (Meles meles) populations. However, culling of badgers in the vicinity of recent TB outbreaks in cattle has failed to reduce the overall incidence of cattle TB. Using data from a large-scale study conducted in 1998-2005, we show that badgers collected on such localized culls had elevated prevalence of Mycobacterium bovis, the causative agent of bovine TB, suggesting that infections in cattle and badgers were indeed associated. Moreover, there was a high degree of similarity in the M. bovis strain types isolated from cattle and associated badgers. This similarity between strain types appeared to be unaffected by time lags between the detection of infection in cattle and culling of badgers, or by the presence of purchased cattle that might have acquired infection elsewhere. However, localized culling appeared to prompt an increase in the prevalence of M. bovis infection in badgers, probably by disrupting ranging and territorial behavior and hence increasing intraspecific transmission rates. This elevated prevalence among badgers could offset the benefits, for cattle, of reduced badger densities and may help to explain the failure of localized culling to reduce cattle TB incidence.
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- 2009
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9. Re: TB policy and the ISG's findings.
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Bourne FJ, Donnelly CA, Cox DR, Gettinby G, McInerney JP, Morrison WI, and Woodroffe R
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- Animals, Cattle, Health Policy, Tuberculosis, Bovine epidemiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine transmission, United Kingdom epidemiology, Disease Reservoirs, Mustelidae, Tuberculosis, Bovine prevention & control
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- 2007
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10. Impacts of widespread badger culling on cattle tuberculosis: concluding analyses from a large-scale field trial.
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Donnelly CA, Wei G, Johnston WT, Cox DR, Woodroffe R, Bourne FJ, Cheeseman CL, Clifton-Hadley RS, Gettinby G, Gilks P, Jenkins HE, Le Fevre AM, McInerney JP, and Morrison WI
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Disease Vectors, Population Density, Tuberculosis, Bovine epidemiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine transmission, United Kingdom epidemiology, Mustelidae microbiology, Mycobacterium bovis growth & development, Tuberculosis, Bovine prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Bovine tuberculosis (TB) has re-emerged as a major problem for British cattle farmers. Failure to control the infection has been linked to transmission from European badgers; badger culling has therefore formed a component of British TB control policy since 1973., Objectives and Design: To investigate the impact of repeated widespread badger culling on cattle TB, the Randomised Badger Culling Trial compared TB incidence in cattle herds in and around ten culling areas (each 100 km2) with those in and around ten matched unculled areas., Results: Overall, cattle TB incidence was 23.2% lower (95% confidence interval (CI) 12.4-32.7% lower) inside culled areas, but 24.5% (95% CI 0.6% lower-56.0% higher) higher on land
- Published
- 2007
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11. Culling and cattle controls influence tuberculosis risk for badgers.
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Woodroffe R, Donnelly CA, Jenkins HE, Johnston WT, Cox DR, Bourne FJ, Cheeseman CL, Delahay RJ, Clifton-Hadley RS, Gettinby G, Gilks P, Hewinson RG, McInerney JP, and Morrison WI
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Disease Outbreaks, Foot-and-Mouth Disease epidemiology, Humans, Logistic Models, Mycobacterium bovis isolation & purification, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Serotyping, Mustelidae microbiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine epidemiology
- Abstract
Human and livestock diseases can be difficult to control where infection persists in wildlife populations. In Britain, European badgers (Meles meles) are implicated in transmitting Mycobacterium bovis, the causative agent of bovine tuberculosis (TB), to cattle. Badger culling has therefore been a component of British TB control policy for many years. However, large-scale field trials have recently shown that badger culling has the capacity to cause both increases and decreases in cattle TB incidence. Here, we show that repeated badger culling in the same area is associated with increasing prevalence of M. bovis infection in badgers, especially where landscape features allow badgers from neighboring land to recolonize culled areas. This impact on prevalence in badgers might reduce the beneficial effects of culling on cattle TB incidence, and could contribute to the detrimental effects that have been observed. Additionally, we show that suspension of cattle TB controls during a nationwide epidemic of foot and mouth disease, which substantially delayed removal of TB-affected cattle, was associated with a widespread increase in the prevalence of M. bovis infection in badgers. This pattern suggests that infection may be transmitted from cattle to badgers, as well as vice versa. Clearly, disease control measures aimed at either host species may have unintended consequences for transmission, both within and between species. Our findings highlight the need for policymakers to consider multiple transmission routes when managing multihost pathogens.
- Published
- 2006
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12. TB policy and the badger culling trials.
- Author
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Bourne FJ, Donnelly CA, Cox DR, Gettinby G, McInerney JP, Morrison WI, and Woodroffe R
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, England, Euthanasia, Animal, Evidence-Based Medicine, Population Control, Disease Reservoirs veterinary, Mustelidae, Tuberculosis, Bovine prevention & control, Tuberculosis, Bovine transmission
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Positive and negative effects of widespread badger culling on tuberculosis in cattle.
- Author
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Donnelly CA, Woodroffe R, Cox DR, Bourne FJ, Cheeseman CL, Clifton-Hadley RS, Wei G, Gettinby G, Gilks P, Jenkins H, Johnston WT, Le Fevre AM, McInerney JP, and Morrison WI
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Wild microbiology, Cattle, Female, Incidence, Mycobacterium bovis, Random Allocation, Tuberculosis, Bovine transmission, United Kingdom epidemiology, Zoonoses microbiology, Communicable Disease Control methods, Mustelidae microbiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine epidemiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine prevention & control, Zoonoses epidemiology, Zoonoses transmission
- Abstract
Human and livestock diseases can be difficult to control where infection persists in wildlife populations. For three decades, European badgers (Meles meles) have been culled by the British government in a series of attempts to limit the spread of Mycobacterium bovis, the causative agent of bovine tuberculosis (TB), to cattle. Despite these efforts, the incidence of TB in cattle has risen consistently, re-emerging as a primary concern for Britain's cattle industry. Recently, badger culling has attracted controversy because experimental studies have reached contrasting conclusions (albeit using different protocols), with culled areas showing either markedly reduced or increased incidence of TB in cattle. This has confused attempts to develop a science-based management policy. Here we use data from a large-scale, randomized field experiment to help resolve these apparent differences. We show that, as carried out in this experiment, culling reduces cattle TB incidence in the areas that are culled, but increases incidence in adjoining areas. These findings are biologically consistent with previous studies but will present challenges for policy development.
- Published
- 2006
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14. Simple model for tuberculosis in cattle and badgers.
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Cox DR, Donnelly CA, Bourne FJ, Gettinby G, McInerney JP, Morrison WI, and Woodroffe R
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Reproducibility of Results, Time Factors, Tuberculosis epidemiology, Tuberculosis microbiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine epidemiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine microbiology, Models, Biological, Mustelidae microbiology, Tuberculosis transmission, Tuberculosis veterinary, Tuberculosis, Bovine prevention & control, Tuberculosis, Bovine transmission
- Abstract
As an aid to the study of bovine tuberculosis (TB), a simple model has been developed of an epidemic involving two species, cattle and badgers. Each species may infect the other. The proportion of animals affected is assumed relatively small so that the usual nonlinear aspects of epidemic theory are avoided. The model is used to study the long-run and transient effect on cattle of culling badgers and the effect of a period without routine testing for TB, such as occurred during the 2001 epidemic of foot-and-mouth disease in Great Britain. Finally, by examining the changes in cattle TB over the last 15 years, and with some other working assumptions, it is estimated that the net reproduction number of the epidemic is approximately 1.1. The implications for controlling the disease are discussed.
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- 2005
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15. Herd-level risk factors associated with tuberculosis breakdowns among cattle herds in England before the 2001 foot-and-mouth disease epidemic.
- Author
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Johnston WT, Gettinby G, Cox DR, Donnelly CA, Bourne J, Clifton-Hadley R, Le Fevre AM, McInerney JP, Mitchell A, Morrison WI, and Woodroffe R
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, England, Foot-and-Mouth Disease epidemiology, Housing, Animal, Regression Analysis, Risk Factors, Disease Outbreaks, Tuberculosis, Bovine epidemiology
- Abstract
A case-control study of the factors associated with the risk of a bovine tuberculosis (TB) breakdown in cattle herds was undertaken within the randomized badger culling trial (RBCT). TB breakdowns occurring prior to the 2001 foot-and-mouth disease epidemic in three RBCT triplets were eligible to be cases; controls were selected from the same RBCT area. Data from 151 case farms and 117 control farms were analysed using logistic regression. The strongest factors associated with an increased TB risk were movement of cattle onto the farm from markets or farm sales, operating a farm over multiple premises and the use of either covered yard or 'other' housing types. Spreading artificial fertilizers or farmyard manure on grazing land were both associated with decreased risk. These first case-control results from the RBCT will be followed by similar analyses as more data become available.
- Published
- 2005
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16. Impact of localized badger culling on tuberculosis incidence in British cattle.
- Author
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Donnelly CA, Woodroffe R, Cox DR, Bourne J, Gettinby G, Le Fevre AM, McInerney JP, and Morrison WI
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- Animals, Cattle, Incidence, Population Dynamics, Time Factors, Tuberculosis, Bovine microbiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine transmission, United Kingdom epidemiology, Carnivora microbiology, Carnivora physiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine epidemiology, Tuberculosis, Bovine prevention & control
- Abstract
Pathogens that are transmitted between wildlife, livestock and humans present major challenges for the protection of human and animal health, the economic sustainability of agriculture, and the conservation of wildlife. Mycobacterium bovis, the aetiological agent of bovine tuberculosis (TB), is one such pathogen. The incidence of TB in cattle has increased substantially in parts of Great Britain in the past two decades, adversely affecting the livelihoods of cattle farmers and potentially increasing the risks of human exposure. The control of bovine TB in Great Britain is complicated by the involvement of wildlife, particularly badgers (Meles meles), which appear to sustain endemic infection and can transmit TB to cattle. Between 1975 and 1997 over 20,000 badgers were culled as part of British TB control policy, generating conflict between conservation and farming interest groups. Here we present results from a large-scale field trial that indicate that localized badger culling not only fails to control but also seems to increase TB incidence in cattle.
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- 2003
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17. Pathogenesis and diagnosis of infections with Mycobacterium bovis in cattle. Independent Scientific Group on Cattle TB.
- Author
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Morrison WI, Bourne FJ, Cox DR, Donnelly CA, Gettinby G, McInerney JP, and Woodroffe R
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Diagnosis, Differential, Disease Transmission, Infectious veterinary, Humans, Sensitivity and Specificity, Skin Tests veterinary, Tuberculosis, Bovine diagnosis, Tuberculosis, Bovine transmission, Mycobacterium bovis, Tuberculosis, Bovine etiology
- Abstract
In last week's Veterinary Record, members of the Independent Scientific Group on Cattle TB discussed the approach they are adopting in attempting to develop sustainable strategies for controlling bovine tuberculosis in cattle (VR, February 19, pp 207-210). In this second, complementary article, they consider the extent to which efforts to control the disease may be constrained by limitations in current testing procedures.
- Published
- 2000
18. Bovine tuberculosis: towards a future control strategy.
- Author
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Bourne J, Donnelly CA, Cox DR, Gettinby G, McInerney JP, Morrison I, and Woodroffe R
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Wild, Cattle, Disease Reservoirs, Disease Transmission, Infectious veterinary, Tuberculosis, Bovine diagnosis, United Kingdom, Veterinary Medicine trends, Carnivora microbiology, Public Policy, Tuberculosis, Bovine prevention & control
- Abstract
The Independent Scientific Group on Cattle TB was appointed by the Government in 1998 to implement and develop the research recommendations of the 1997 Krebs report on bovine tuberculosis in cattle and badgers. In this article, members of the group discuss the approach they are adopting in attempting to ensure that future control strategies are scientifically based. In a second article, to be published in next week's Veterinary Record, the group will consider the extent to which efforts to control the disease in cattle may be constrained by limitations in current testing procedures.
- Published
- 2000
19. Effect of vaccination against Aujeszky's disease compared with test and slaughter programme: epidemiological and economical evaluations.
- Author
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Willeberg P, Leontides L, Ewald C, Mortensen S, McInerney JP, Howe KS, and Kooij D
- Subjects
- Animals, Costs and Cost Analysis, Denmark epidemiology, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Female, Geography, Germany epidemiology, Netherlands, Pseudorabies epidemiology, Risk Factors, Swine, Vaccination economics, Abattoirs economics, Pseudorabies economics, Pseudorabies prevention & control, Vaccination veterinary
- Abstract
In January 1990, a 6-year program was initiated to eliminate endemic Aujeszky's Disease virus (ADV) infection from the pig herds in an area of Northern Germany, bordering Southern Denmark, with intensive pig farming. In the first 3 years of the campaign, an intensive compulsory vaccination program, with glycoprotein I (gI)-deleted vaccines, of all pigs in the area was employed. Beginning in June 1990 and for the first 3 years of the project, approximately 200 herds randomly selected from all herds in the area, were serologically tested each quarter. In each farrow-to-feeder (FAFE), feeder-to-finish (FEFI) and farrow-to-finish (FAFI) herd, 20 female breeding pigs, 20 finishing pigs (> or = 50 kgs liveweight) and 10 female breeding pigs and 10 finishing pigs, respectively, were blood sampled. The sera were tested by the Herd-Check Anti-PRV(S) ELISA test (IDDEX Inc., ME). Sera positive to this test were examined by the HerdCheck Anti-ADV gI-ELISA test (IDDEX Inc., ME). Data on potentially confounding management factors were collected through a pilot-tested questionnaire, administered to farmers by 2 veterinarians who blood sampled the pigs. For fattening herds (FEFI and fattening sections of FAFI herds), the association between the odds of > or = 1 gI+ finishing pigs and the time between initiation of the program in the area and sampling date (a surrogate for the effect of the program) was modelled using ordinary logistic regression. The association between the odds of gI+ females in seropositive (> or = gI+ females) FAFE and FAFI herds and time since initiation of the program was investigated with logistic-binomial regression models. Results of the study show that the longer the period from the beginning of compulsory vaccination to the date the herd was sampled the lower the odds of gI+ fattening herds and gI+ female breeding pigs in herds of the area. The beneficial effect of mass vaccination on the reduction of ADV spread was accounted for by this relationship. For fattening herds this relationship appeared curvilinear, with the reduction in the log-odds being more rapid in the 1st year of the program. This non-linear pattern indicates that for the elimination of the risk of ADV-infection from fattening herds of the area, the mass vaccination program should be complemented with additional measures such as test-and-slaughter of infected breeding pigs. A computerized economical model to estimate the effects of ADV-infection at the herd and area level has been developed. The analytical structure consists of a basic epidemiological model linked to an economic estimation framework. The economic model predictions allow priorities to be given to alternative control strategies. Mass vaccination of all pigs in regions with endemically infected herds followed by test-and-removal of seropositive animals is the most cost-effective way to control the spread of ADV within the swine population. Other possible control strategies such as intensive vaccination or complete test-and-removal all had higher overall costs, either because of the less efficient production, or because of the high costs of straight test-and-removal.
- Published
- 1996
20. Economic progress.
- Author
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Howe KS, McInerney JP, and Kooij D
- Subjects
- Ethics, Professional, Humans, Animal Welfare, Value of Life
- Published
- 1992
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21. The economic analysis of livestock disease: the developing framework.
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McInerney JP
- Subjects
- Animal Diseases prevention & control, Animals, Animal Diseases economics, Animals, Domestic
- Published
- 1988
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