Bucini Gabriela, Merrill Scott C, Clark Eric, Moegenburg Susan M, Zia Asim, Koliba Christopher J, Wiltshire Serge, Trinity Luke, Smith Julia M
Department of Plant and Soil Science, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, United States.
The Vermont Complex Systems Center, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, United States.
Front Vet Sci. 2019 Jun 25;6:196. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00196. eCollection 2019.
Hog producers' operational decisions can be informed by an awareness of risks associated with emergent and endemic diseases. Outbreaks of porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDv) have been re-occurring every year since the first onset in 2013 with substantial losses across the hog production supply chain. Interestingly, a decreasing trend in PEDv incidence is visible. We assert that changes in human behaviors may underlie this trend. Disease prevention using biosecurity practices is used to minimize risk of infection but its efficacy is conditional on human behavior and risk attitude. Standard epidemiological models bring important insights into disease dynamics but have limited predictive ability. Since research shows that human behavior plays a driving role in the disease spread process, the explicit inclusion of human behavior into models adds an important dimension to understanding disease spread. Here we analyze PEDv incidence emerging from an agent-based model (ABM) that uses both epidemiological dynamics and algorithms that incorporate heterogeneous human decisions. We investigate the effects of shifting fractions of hog producers between risk tolerant and risk averse positions. These shifts affect the dynamics describing willingness to increase biosecurity as a response to disease threats and, indirectly, change infection probabilities and the resultant intensity and impact of the disease outbreak. Our ABM generates empirically verifiable patterns of PEDv transmission. Scenario results show that relatively small shifts (10% of the producer agents) toward a risk averse position can lead to a significant decrease in total incidence. For significantly steeper decreases in disease incidence, the model's hog producer population needed at least 37.5% of risk averse. Our study provides insight into the link between risk attitude, decisions related to biosecurity, and consequent spread of disease within a livestock production system. We suggest that it is possible to create positive, lasting changes in animal health by nudging the population of livestock producers toward more risk averse behaviors. We make a case for integrating social and epidemiological aspects in disease spread models to test intervention strategies intended to improve biosecurity and animal health at the system scale.
养猪生产者的运营决策可以通过了解与新发和地方病相关的风险来提供信息。自2013年首次出现猪流行性腹泻病毒(PEDv)疫情以来,每年都会再次发生,给整个生猪生产供应链带来巨大损失。有趣的是,PEDv发病率呈下降趋势。我们认为人类行为的变化可能是这一趋势的潜在原因。使用生物安全措施进行疾病预防旨在将感染风险降至最低,但其效果取决于人类行为和风险态度。标准的流行病学模型为疾病动态提供了重要见解,但预测能力有限。由于研究表明人类行为在疾病传播过程中起驱动作用,将人类行为明确纳入模型为理解疾病传播增加了一个重要维度。在这里,我们分析了基于主体模型(ABM)产生的PEDv发病率,该模型使用了流行病学动态和纳入异质人类决策的算法。我们研究了将不同比例的养猪生产者从风险容忍型转变为风险规避型的影响。这些转变影响了描述因应疾病威胁而增加生物安全意愿的动态,间接改变了感染概率以及疾病爆发的强度和影响。我们的ABM生成了PEDv传播的可实证验证模式。情景结果表明,向风险规避型立场相对较小的转变(10%的生产者主体)可导致总发病率显著下降。为了使疾病发病率大幅下降,模型中的养猪生产者群体至少需要37.5%为风险规避型。我们的研究深入了解了风险态度、与生物安全相关的决策以及牲畜生产系统内疾病传播之间的联系。我们建议,通过促使牲畜生产者群体采取更具风险规避性的行为,有可能在动物健康方面创造积极、持久的变化。我们主张将社会和流行病学方面纳入疾病传播模型,以测试旨在在系统层面改善生物安全和动物健康的干预策略。