Risk factors for infectious diseases in backyard poultry farms in the Poyang Lake area, China.

Emergence and transmission of infectious diseases have an enormous impact on the poultry industry and present a serious threat to the health of humans and wild birds. Noncommercial poultry operations, such as backyard poultry facilities in China, are potential sources of virus exchange between comme...

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Main Authors: Yong Wang, Zhiben Jiang, Zhenyu Jin, Hua Tan, Bing Xu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3688663?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-31bb6fc4b3aa4176b7169d80539764802020-11-25T01:17:58ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0186e6736610.1371/journal.pone.0067366Risk factors for infectious diseases in backyard poultry farms in the Poyang Lake area, China.Yong WangZhiben JiangZhenyu JinHua TanBing XuEmergence and transmission of infectious diseases have an enormous impact on the poultry industry and present a serious threat to the health of humans and wild birds. Noncommercial poultry operations, such as backyard poultry facilities in China, are potential sources of virus exchange between commercial poultry and wild birds. It is particularly critical in wetland areas where backyard poultry have close contact with commercial poultry and migratory birds, therefore increasing the risk of contracting infectious diseases. To evaluate the transmission risks, a cross-sectional study was undertaken in the Poyang Lake area, China, involving 309 residents in the backyard poultry farms in three counties (Region A, B, and C) of Jiangxi Province. We examined the backyard poultry population, poultry species, presence of poultry deaths from infectious diseases, food sources, and biosecurity practices. Region B ranked highest for biosecurity while region C ranked lowest. The risks of infectious diseases were assessed by adjusted odds ratio based on multivariate logistic regression analysis. Potential risk factors in the three regions of the study site were compared. In Region A, significant factor was contact of poultry with wild birds (OR: 6.573, 95% CI: 2.148-20.115, P=0.001). In Region B, the most significant factor was contact of poultry with neighboring backyard waterfowls (OR: 3.967, 95% CI: 1.555-10.122, P=0.004). In Region C, significant factors were poultry purchase from local live bird markets (OR: 3.740, 95% CI: 1.243-11.255, P=0.019), and contact of poultry with wild birds (OR: 3.379, 95% CI: 1.058-10.791, P=0.040). In summary, backyard poultry was significantly affected by neighboring commercial poultry and close contact with wild birds. The results are expected to improve our understanding of the transmission risks of infectious diseases in a typical backyard poultry environment in rural China, and address the need to improve local farming practices and take preventive measures.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3688663?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yong Wang
Zhiben Jiang
Zhenyu Jin
Hua Tan
Bing Xu
spellingShingle Yong Wang
Zhiben Jiang
Zhenyu Jin
Hua Tan
Bing Xu
Risk factors for infectious diseases in backyard poultry farms in the Poyang Lake area, China.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Yong Wang
Zhiben Jiang
Zhenyu Jin
Hua Tan
Bing Xu
author_sort Yong Wang
title Risk factors for infectious diseases in backyard poultry farms in the Poyang Lake area, China.
title_short Risk factors for infectious diseases in backyard poultry farms in the Poyang Lake area, China.
title_full Risk factors for infectious diseases in backyard poultry farms in the Poyang Lake area, China.
title_fullStr Risk factors for infectious diseases in backyard poultry farms in the Poyang Lake area, China.
title_full_unstemmed Risk factors for infectious diseases in backyard poultry farms in the Poyang Lake area, China.
title_sort risk factors for infectious diseases in backyard poultry farms in the poyang lake area, china.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Emergence and transmission of infectious diseases have an enormous impact on the poultry industry and present a serious threat to the health of humans and wild birds. Noncommercial poultry operations, such as backyard poultry facilities in China, are potential sources of virus exchange between commercial poultry and wild birds. It is particularly critical in wetland areas where backyard poultry have close contact with commercial poultry and migratory birds, therefore increasing the risk of contracting infectious diseases. To evaluate the transmission risks, a cross-sectional study was undertaken in the Poyang Lake area, China, involving 309 residents in the backyard poultry farms in three counties (Region A, B, and C) of Jiangxi Province. We examined the backyard poultry population, poultry species, presence of poultry deaths from infectious diseases, food sources, and biosecurity practices. Region B ranked highest for biosecurity while region C ranked lowest. The risks of infectious diseases were assessed by adjusted odds ratio based on multivariate logistic regression analysis. Potential risk factors in the three regions of the study site were compared. In Region A, significant factor was contact of poultry with wild birds (OR: 6.573, 95% CI: 2.148-20.115, P=0.001). In Region B, the most significant factor was contact of poultry with neighboring backyard waterfowls (OR: 3.967, 95% CI: 1.555-10.122, P=0.004). In Region C, significant factors were poultry purchase from local live bird markets (OR: 3.740, 95% CI: 1.243-11.255, P=0.019), and contact of poultry with wild birds (OR: 3.379, 95% CI: 1.058-10.791, P=0.040). In summary, backyard poultry was significantly affected by neighboring commercial poultry and close contact with wild birds. The results are expected to improve our understanding of the transmission risks of infectious diseases in a typical backyard poultry environment in rural China, and address the need to improve local farming practices and take preventive measures.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3688663?pdf=render
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