Abstract

The foot-and-mouth disease is an ever-present hazard to the livestock industry due to the huge economic consequences following an outbreak that necessitates culling of possibly infected animals in vast numbers. The disease is highly contagious and previous epizootics have shown that it spreads by many routes. One such route is airborne transmission, which has been investigated in this study by means of a detailed multilevel model that includes all scales of an outbreak. Local spread within an infected farm is described by a stochastic compartment model while the spread between farms is quantified by atmospheric dispersion simulations using a network representation of the set of farms. The model was applied to the Swedish livestock industry and the risk for an epizootic outbreak in Sweden was estimated using the basic reproduction number of each individual livestock-holding farm as the endpoint metric. The study was based on comprehensive official data sets for both the current livestock holdings and regional meteorological conditions. Three species of farm animals are susceptible to the disease and are present in large numbers: cattle, pigs and sheep. These species are all included in this study using their individual responses and consequences to the disease. It was concluded that some parts of southern Sweden are indeed preconditioned to harbor an airborne epizootic, while the sparse farm population of the north renders such events unlikely to occur there. The distribution of the basic reproduction number spans over several orders of magnitudes with low risk of disease spread from the majority of the farms while some farms may act as very strong disease transmitters. The results may serve as basic data in the planning of the national preparedness for this type of events.

Highlights

  • Cloven-hoofed animals are susceptible to the foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) which is highly contagious

  • Multilevel model for airborne transmission of foot-and-mouth disease regeringen.se/sveriges-regering/ forsvarsdepartementet/ The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

  • The yearly averaged R0 for Sweden is 3.87, which means that farms are, when all other farms are uninfected, in average expected to transmit an introduced FMD virus (FMDV) to 3.87 other farms

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Summary

Introduction

Cloven-hoofed animals are susceptible to the foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) which is highly contagious. The disease is rarely lethal but constitutes a severe threat to the livestock sector due to the economic impact that follows an outbreak. FMD is widely spread and is endemic in large parts of Africa and Asia [1]. Multilevel model for airborne transmission of foot-and-mouth disease regeringen.se/sveriges-regering/ forsvarsdepartementet/ The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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