Disease properties, geography, and mitigation strategies in a simulation spread of rinderpest across the United States

<p>Abstract</p> <p>For the past decade, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations has been working toward eradicating rinderpest through vaccination and intense surveillance by 2012. Because of the potential severity of a rinderpest epidemic, it is prudent to prep...

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Main Authors: Manore Carrie, McMahon Benjamin, Fair Jeanne, Hyman James M, Brown Mac, LaBute Montiago
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2011-03-01
Series:Veterinary Research
Online Access:http://www.veterinaryresearch.org/content/42/1/55
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spelling doaj-0abbf80252464886827fb692cd9db66b2020-11-24T23:28:19ZengBMCVeterinary Research0928-42491297-97162011-03-014215510.1186/1297-9716-42-55Disease properties, geography, and mitigation strategies in a simulation spread of rinderpest across the United StatesManore CarrieMcMahon BenjaminFair JeanneHyman James MBrown MacLaBute Montiago<p>Abstract</p> <p>For the past decade, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations has been working toward eradicating rinderpest through vaccination and intense surveillance by 2012. Because of the potential severity of a rinderpest epidemic, it is prudent to prepare for an unexpected outbreak in animal populations. There is no immunity to the disease among the livestock or wildlife in the United States (US). If rinderpest were to emerge in the US, the loss in livestock could be devastating. We predict the potential spread of rinderpest using a two-stage model for the spread of a multi-host infectious disease among agricultural animals in the US. The model incorporates large-scale interactions among US counties and the small-scale dynamics of disease spread within a county. The model epidemic was seeded in 16 locations and there was a strong dependence of the overall epidemic size on the starting location. The epidemics were classified according to overall size into small epidemics of 100 to 300 animals (failed epidemics), epidemics infecting 3 000 to 30 000 animals (medium epidemics), and the large epidemics infecting around one million beef cattle. The size of the rinderpest epidemics were directly related to the origin of the disease and whether or not the disease moved into certain key counties in high-livestock-density areas of the US. The epidemic size also depended upon response time and effectiveness of movement controls.</p> http://www.veterinaryresearch.org/content/42/1/55
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Manore Carrie
McMahon Benjamin
Fair Jeanne
Hyman James M
Brown Mac
LaBute Montiago
spellingShingle Manore Carrie
McMahon Benjamin
Fair Jeanne
Hyman James M
Brown Mac
LaBute Montiago
Disease properties, geography, and mitigation strategies in a simulation spread of rinderpest across the United States
Veterinary Research
author_facet Manore Carrie
McMahon Benjamin
Fair Jeanne
Hyman James M
Brown Mac
LaBute Montiago
author_sort Manore Carrie
title Disease properties, geography, and mitigation strategies in a simulation spread of rinderpest across the United States
title_short Disease properties, geography, and mitigation strategies in a simulation spread of rinderpest across the United States
title_full Disease properties, geography, and mitigation strategies in a simulation spread of rinderpest across the United States
title_fullStr Disease properties, geography, and mitigation strategies in a simulation spread of rinderpest across the United States
title_full_unstemmed Disease properties, geography, and mitigation strategies in a simulation spread of rinderpest across the United States
title_sort disease properties, geography, and mitigation strategies in a simulation spread of rinderpest across the united states
publisher BMC
series Veterinary Research
issn 0928-4249
1297-9716
publishDate 2011-03-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>For the past decade, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations has been working toward eradicating rinderpest through vaccination and intense surveillance by 2012. Because of the potential severity of a rinderpest epidemic, it is prudent to prepare for an unexpected outbreak in animal populations. There is no immunity to the disease among the livestock or wildlife in the United States (US). If rinderpest were to emerge in the US, the loss in livestock could be devastating. We predict the potential spread of rinderpest using a two-stage model for the spread of a multi-host infectious disease among agricultural animals in the US. The model incorporates large-scale interactions among US counties and the small-scale dynamics of disease spread within a county. The model epidemic was seeded in 16 locations and there was a strong dependence of the overall epidemic size on the starting location. The epidemics were classified according to overall size into small epidemics of 100 to 300 animals (failed epidemics), epidemics infecting 3 000 to 30 000 animals (medium epidemics), and the large epidemics infecting around one million beef cattle. The size of the rinderpest epidemics were directly related to the origin of the disease and whether or not the disease moved into certain key counties in high-livestock-density areas of the US. The epidemic size also depended upon response time and effectiveness of movement controls.</p>
url http://www.veterinaryresearch.org/content/42/1/55
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