Abstract

BackgroundBiosecurity is at the forefront of the fight against infectious diseases in animal populations. Few research studies have attempted to identify and quantify the effectiveness of biosecurity against disease introduction or presence in cattle farms and, when done, they have relied on the collection of on-farm data. Data on environmental, animal movement, demographic/husbandry systems and density disease determinants can be collated without requiring additional specific on-farm data collection activities, since they have already been collected for some other purposes. The aim of this study was to classify cattle herds according to their risk of disease presence as a proxy for compromised biosecurity in the cattle population of Wales in 2004 for risk-based surveillance purposes.ResultsThree data mining methods have been applied: logistic regression, classification trees and factor analysis. Using the cattle holding population in Wales, a holding was considered positive if at least bovine TB or one of the ten most frequently diagnosed infectious or transmissible non-notifiable diseases in England and Wales, according to the Veterinary Investigation Surveillance Report (VIDA) had been diagnosed in 2004. High-risk holdings can be described as open large cattle herds located in high-density cattle areas with frequent movements off to many locations within Wales. Additional risks are associated with the holding being a dairy enterprise and with a large farming area.ConclusionThis work has demonstrated the potential of mining various livestock-relevant databases to obtain generic criteria for individual cattle herd biosecurity risk classification. Despite the data and analytical constraints the described risk profiles are highly specific and present variable sensitivity depending on the model specifications. Risk profiling of farms provides a tool for designing targeted surveillance activities for endemic or emerging diseases, regardless of the prior amount of information available on biosecurity at farm level. As the delivery of practical evidence-based information and advice is one of the priorities of Defra's new Animal Health and Welfare Strategy (AHWS), data-driven models, derived from existing databases, need to be developed that can then be used to inform activities during outbreaks of endemic diseases and to help design surveillance activities.

Highlights

  • Biosecurity is at the forefront of the fight against infectious diseases in animal populations

  • The identification of the cattle holdings to be included in the study population was performed using a combination of three data sources: CPHs that submitted bovine samples or specimens to any Veterinary Laboratories Agency (VLA)-Regional Laboratories during 2004 (2,721), CPHs that were tested for TB in Wales during 2004 (2,098) and CPHs that registered cattle movements into Cattle Tracing System (CTS) during 2004 (13,352 registered movements off and 10,258 registered movements on)

  • It is expected that the number of included holdings which did not have a cattle farm enterprise was reduced to a minimum

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Summary

Introduction

Biosecurity is at the forefront of the fight against infectious diseases in animal populations. Following stagnation during the late nineties, world trade in agricultural products has increased during the last six years [1] on average by 9% annually. This development together with the agreement of sanitary and phytosanitary measures (SPS agreement) for the protection of public, animal and plant health during international trade have resulted in an increased need for developing more reliable certification approaches of disease-free status at farm and national level. The implementation of biosecurity and bio-containment has been a component of such approaches and both concepts have been emphasized in other areas such as bioterrorism, contingency plans and animal disease emergency plans [2].

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