| Literature DB >> 27014703 |
Andres M Perez1, Anna Alba1, Dane Goede1, Brian McCluskey2, Robert Morrison1.
Abstract
The reporting and monitoring of swine enteric coronavirus diseases (SECD), including porcine epidemic diarrhea virus and porcine delta coronavirus, in the United States have been challenging because of the initial absence of a regulatory framework and the emerging nature of these diseases. The National Animal Health Laboratory Network, the Emergency Management and Response System, and the Swine Health Monitoring Project were used to monitor the disease situation between May 2013 and March 2015. Important differences existed between and among them in terms of nature and extent of reporting. Here, we assess the implementation of these systems from different perspectives, including a description and comparison of collected data, disease metrics, usefulness, simplicity, flexibility, acceptability, representativeness, timeliness, and stability. This assessment demonstrates the limitations that the absence of premises identification imposes on certain animal health surveillance and response databases, and the importance of federally regulated frameworks in collecting accurate information in a timely manner. This study also demonstrates the value that the voluntary and producer-organized systems may have in monitoring emerging diseases. The results from all three data sources help to establish the baseline information on SECD epidemiological dynamics after almost 3 years of disease occurrence in the country.Entities:
Keywords: United States; epidemiology; monitoring; swine enteric coronavirus
Year: 2016 PMID: 27014703 PMCID: PMC4789556 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2016.00018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Figure 1Spatial coverage of the three information systems used to collect data on enteric coronavirus records in the United States between May 2013 and March 2015; top (in green), the National Animal Health Laboratory Network (NAHLN); middle (in blue), Swine Health Monitoring and bottom (in red), Emergency Management Reporting System. Shades depict the number of reports on each database and state. Stars in the NAHLN figure indicate the location of the participating laboratories, including Arkansas Livestock and Poultry Commission-Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory; Athens Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, University of Georgia; University of Illinois Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory; Illinois Department of Agriculture, Galesburg Animal Disease Laboratory; Iowa State University Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory; Kansas State Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory; Michigan State University–Diagnostic Center for Population and Animal Health; University of Minnesota Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory; Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory, University of Missouri; University of Nebraska Veterinary Diagnostic Center; USDA National Veterinary Services Laboratories; Rollins Diagnostic Laboratory, North Carolina Department of Agriculture; Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, North Dakota State University; Ohio Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory–Ohio Department of Agriculture; Oregon State University Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory; Indiana Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory, Purdue University; Animal Disease Research and Diagnostic Laboratory, South Dakota State University; and Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory, Texas A&M University.
Comparative features associated with the National Animal Health Laboratory Network (NAHL), Emergency Management and Response System (EMRS), and Swine Health Monitoring Project (SHMP) databases.
| Database | National Animal Health Laboratory Network (NAHLN) | Emergency Management and Response System (EMRS) | Swine Health Monitoring Project (SHMP) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Compilation of PEDV PCR testing data for analysis, reporting, and decision support | Occurrence of PEDV in the swine herds/premises | Situational awareness for the participating systems |
| Tracking of disease response and control actions | |||
| Start date | June 16, 2013 | June 5, 2014 | May 13, 2013 |
| Unit record | Test result | Premise/herd | Breeding herd |
| Coverage | National (all sites) | National (all sites) | Participating systems |
| Case definition | A sample positive to PEDV PCR | Confirmed herd: at least one pig positive to PEDV PCR plus pigs with clinical signs | Farm in which PEDV was reported by the veterinarian, based on clinical signs and diagnostic test results |
| Presumptive herd: at least one pig positive to PEDV PCR and no clinical signs observed | |||
| Frequency of data submissions | Weekly until September 2014. After, some daily submissions using the HL7 electronic messaging | Daily | Weekly |
| Participation | Voluntary NAHLN labs | Mandatory according to the federal ordering | Voluntary producers of breeding herds |
| Access to available data | USDA staff and lab participants | State and Federal animal health officials | Public: as aggregated data |
| Participants: raw and de-identified data | |||
| Reporting | Weekly reports of amount of positive and negative accessions by week, month, and state publicly available | Weekly reports; summaries of the positive premises by week, month, and state; reports available to the public | Weekly reports depicting time series for participating systems |
Figure 2Monthly swine enteric coronavirus records reported in the United States by the three monitoring systems between May 2013 and March 2015.
Figure 3Monthly swine enteric coronavirus records in the four US States with more positive herds reported between May 2013 and March 2015.