Farm Animal & Veterinary Public Health, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Sydney, Camden, New South Wales, Australia.
PLoS One. 2013 May 31;8(5):e64811. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0064811. Print 2013.
The animal and public health communities need to address the challenge posed by zoonotic emerging infectious diseases. To minimize the impacts of future events, animal disease surveillance will need to enable prompt event detection and response. Diagnostic laboratory-based surveillance systems targeting domestic animals depend in large part on private veterinarians to submit samples from cases to a laboratory. In contexts where pre-diagnostic laboratory surveillance systems have been implemented, this group of veterinarians is often asked to input data. This scenario holds true in Alberta where private cattle veterinarians have been asked to participate in the Alberta Veterinary Surveillance Network-Veterinary Practice Surveillance, a platform to which pre-diagnostic disease and non-disease case data are submitted. Consequently, understanding the factors that influence these veterinarians to submit cases to a laboratory and the complex of factors that affect their participation in surveillance programs is foundational to interpreting disease patterns reported by laboratories and engaging veterinarians in surveillance. A focused ethnographic study was conducted with ten cattle veterinarians in Alberta. Individual in-depth interviews with participants were recorded and transcribed to enable thematic analysis. Laboratory submissions were biased toward outbreaks of unknown cause, cases with unusual mortality rates, and issues with potential herd-level implications. Decreasing cattle value and government support for laboratory testing have contributed to fewer submissions over time. Participants were willing participants in surveillance, though government support and collaboration were necessary. Changes in the beef industry and veterinary profession, as well as cattle producers themselves, present both challenges and opportunities in surveillance.
动物和公共卫生界需要应对人畜共患新发传染病带来的挑战。为了将未来事件的影响降到最低,动物疾病监测需要能够及时发现和应对事件。针对家畜的基于诊断实验室的监测系统在很大程度上依赖于私人兽医将病例样本提交给实验室。在已经实施了预诊断实验室监测系统的情况下,这群兽医通常被要求输入数据。在艾伯塔省,这种情况是真实存在的,那里的私人牛兽医被要求参与艾伯塔省兽医监测网络-兽医实践监测,这是一个提交预诊断疾病和非疾病病例数据的平台。因此,了解影响这些兽医向实验室提交病例的因素以及影响他们参与监测计划的复杂因素,对于解释实验室报告的疾病模式和让兽医参与监测至关重要。对艾伯塔省的 10 名牛兽医进行了一项集中的民族志研究。对参与者进行了单独的深入访谈,并记录和转录了访谈内容,以进行主题分析。实验室提交的内容偏向于不明原因的暴发、死亡率异常的病例以及对畜群水平有潜在影响的问题。随着时间的推移,牛的价值下降和政府对实验室检测的支持减少,导致提交的病例减少。尽管需要政府的支持和合作,但参与者还是愿意参与监测。牛肉行业和兽医行业的变化,以及牛的生产者本身,在监测方面既带来了挑战,也带来了机遇。