Yadav Shankar, Weng Hsin-Yi
Department of Comparative Pathobiology, Purdue University, 625 Harrison Street, West Lafayette, IN, 47907, USA.
Plum Island Animal Disease Center Research Participation Program (ORISE fellow), Orient Point, NY, 11957, USA.
BMC Vet Res. 2017 Apr 4;13(1):83. doi: 10.1186/s12917-017-1008-5.
The study aim was to quantify the impact of movement restriction on the well-being of pigs and the associated mitigation responses during a classical swine fever (CSF) outbreak. We developed a stochastic risk assessment model and incorporated Indiana swine industry statistics to estimate the timing and number of swine premises that would encounter overcrowding or feed interruption resulting from movement restriction. Our model also quantified the amount of on-farm euthanasia and movement of pigs to slaughter plants required to alleviate those conditions. We simulated various single-site (i.e., an outbreak initiated from one location) and multiple-site (i.e., an outbreak initiated from more than one location) outbreak scenarios in Indiana to estimate outputs.
The study estimated that 14% of the swine premises in Indiana would encounter overcrowding or feed interruption due to movement restriction implemented during a CSF outbreak. The number of premises that would experience animal welfare conditions was about 2.5 fold of the number of infected premises. On-farm euthanasia needed to be performed on 33% of those swine premises to alleviate adverse animal welfare conditions, and more than 90% of on-farm euthanasia had to be carried out within 2 weeks after the implementation of movement restriction. Conversely, movement of pigs to slaughter plants could alleviate 67% of adverse animal welfare conditions due to movement restriction, and only less than 1% of movement of pigs to slaughter plants had to be initiated in the first 2 weeks of movement restrictions. The risk of secondary outbreaks due to movement of pigs from movement restriction areas to slaughter plants was low and only seven pigs from each shipment needed to be tested for CSF infection to prevent a secondary outbreak.
We found that the scale of adverse animal welfare consequences of movement restriction during a CSF outbreak in Indiana was substantial, and controlled movement of pigs to slaughter plants was an efficient and low-risk alternative mitigation response to on-farm euthanasia. The output estimates generated from this study provide empirical evidence for decision makers to properly incorporate required resources for mitigating adverse animal welfare conditions in CSF outbreak management strategic planning.
本研究的目的是量化行动限制对猪的福祉的影响,以及在经典猪瘟(CSF)疫情期间的相关缓解措施。我们开发了一个随机风险评估模型,并纳入印第安纳州养猪业统计数据,以估计因行动限制而面临过度拥挤或饲料中断的养猪场的时间和数量。我们的模型还量化了为缓解这些情况所需的农场内安乐死数量以及运往屠宰场的猪的数量。我们在印第安纳州模拟了各种单地点(即疫情从一个地点开始)和多地点(即疫情从多个地点开始)的疫情情景,以估计结果。
该研究估计,印第安纳州14%的养猪场将因CSF疫情期间实施的行动限制而面临过度拥挤或饲料中断。经历动物福利问题的猪场数量约为受感染猪场数量的2.5倍。需要对33%的此类养猪场实施农场内安乐死,以缓解不良动物福利状况,且超过90%的农场内安乐死必须在行动限制实施后的2周内进行。相反,将猪运往屠宰场可缓解67%因行动限制导致的不良动物福利状况,且在行动限制的前2周内,只有不到1%的猪需要运往屠宰场。因将猪从行动限制区运往屠宰场而引发二次疫情的风险较低,每次运输只需对7头猪进行CSF感染检测,即可预防二次疫情。
我们发现,印第安纳州CSF疫情期间行动限制对动物福利产生的不良后果规模很大,将猪有控制地运往屠宰场是一种有效且低风险的替代缓解措施,可替代农场内安乐死。本研究得出的结果估计为决策者在CSF疫情管理战略规划中适当纳入缓解不良动物福利状况所需资源提供了实证依据。