Abstract

BackgroundKorean surveillance program for bovine brucellosis was improved by extending it to beef slaughterhouses and by pre-movement testing of bulls on May 2005 (Intervention 1). The bovine brucellosis surveillance program was further extended to beef cattle farms with more than 10 heads of cattle on June 2006 (Intervention 2).MethodsTo quantify the temporal relationship between bovine and human brucellosis, a time-series analysis was conducted using Korean national notification data reported between January 2004 and December 2014.ResultsOur findings indicate that while during the pre-intervention phase (January 2004 to March 2005) there was no significant temporal relationship between the incidences of bovine and human brucellosis, significant temporal relationships were observed after Intervention 1 (June 2005 to June 2006, no lag, β = 0.57, p = 0.04), and Intervention 2 (July 2006 to June 2007, 1-month lag, β = 0.65, p = 0.03). Furthermore, significant changes in incidence in human were observed after Intervention 1 (β = − 0.17 per 10 million-people, p = 0.03) and Intervention 2 (β = − 0.19 per 10 million-people, p = 0.04).ConclusionsThese findings indicated the changes of a nationwide comprehensive surveillance programme targeting all cattle is required for effective reduction in the human population.

Highlights

  • Korean surveillance program for bovine brucellosis was improved by extending it to beef slaughterhouses and by pre-movement testing of bulls on May 2005 (Intervention 1)

  • Data for analysis Since 2000, human brucellosis has been designated as a Korean National Notifiable Infectious Disease, whereby all cases including probable and confirmed cases must be reported to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) [12]

  • The impact of expanded surveillance of beef cattle on human brucellosis There was an increase in the trend of incidence (0.14 cases per 10 million people; p < 0.01) during Phase 1

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Summary

Introduction

Korean surveillance program for bovine brucellosis was improved by extending it to beef slaughterhouses and by pre-movement testing of bulls on May 2005 (Intervention 1). The bovine brucellosis surveillance program was further extended to beef cattle farms with more than 10 heads of cattle on June 2006 (Intervention 2). In Korea, bovine brucellosis was first detected in 1955 in imported cattle originating from the US [10]. Between 1964 and 2003, control and prevention measures of bovine brucellosis mainly focused on dairy herds using the milk ring test on bulk milk samples [11,12,13]. Control measures including rapid depopulation were undertaken upon detection of a bovine case [11].

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