| Literature DB >> 29435773 |
Andrew M Bate1, Glyn Jones2, Adam Kleczkowski3, Rebecca Naylor4, Jon Timmis4, Piran C L White5, Julia Touza5.
Abstract
The maintenance of livestock health depends on the combined actions of many different actors, both within and across different regulatory frameworks. Prior work recognised that private risk management choices have the ability to reduce the spread of infection to trading partners. We evaluate the efficiency of farmers' alternative biosecurity choices in terms of their own-benefits from unilateral strategies and quantify the impact they may have in filtering the disease externality of trade. We use bovine viral diarrhoea (BVD) in England and Scotland as a case study, since this provides an example of a situation where contrasting strategies for BVD management occur between selling and purchasing farms. We use an agent-based bioeconomic model to assess the payoff dependence of farmers connected by trade but using different BVD management strategies. We compare three disease management actions: test-cull, test-cull with vaccination and vaccination alone. For a two-farm trading situation, all actions carried out by the selling farm provide substantial benefits to the purchasing farm in terms of disease avoided, with the greatest benefit resulting from test-culling with vaccination on the selling farm. Likewise, unilateral disease strategies by purchasers can be effective in reducing disease risks created through trade. We conclude that regulation needs to balance the trade-off between private gains from those bearing the disease management costs and the positive spillover effects on others.Entities:
Keywords: Co-operation; Disease management; Endemic disease; Externality; Livestock
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29435773 PMCID: PMC6132418 DOI: 10.1007/s10393-018-1312-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecohealth ISSN: 1612-9202 Impact factor: 3.184
Summary of Parameter Values Used to Assess the Efficiency of BVD Control Strategies for Farmers’ Self-Protection and Reducing Spillovers to Trading Partners.
| Number of breeders | 60 [AHDB ( |
| Weaning age | 250 days (Nix |
| Time between conceptions | 390 days (Nix |
| Length of pregnancy | 280 days |
| Age at first conception | 450 days |
| Age for culling breeders | 2930 days [Gates ( |
| Recovery from disease | 12 days (Baker |
| Disease transmissibility of PIs | 0.015 per animal per day (default) |
| Disease transmissibility of TIs | 0.001 per animal per day (default, set to 1/15 of above) |
| Early/Late pregnancy threshold | 150 days (Sørensen et al. |
| Abortion rate | 50% (default) |
| Mortality rate of PIs | 1/365 per day (Duffell and Harkness |
| Revenue from culling a breeder (PI or old age) | £500 (Nix |
| Revenue from culling a PI calf | £0 (no real demand for veal in UK) |
| Revenue from selling a calf at weaning | £500 (Nix |
| Cost of TI | £0.50 per animal per day [Gunn et al. ( |
| Cost of PI | £1.50 per animal per day [Gunn et al. ( |
| Cost of testing | £5 per tested animal (SAC |
| Cost of vaccine | £5 per breeder per year (farmacy.co.uk, Accessed: 3rd August 2016) (£300 for annual vaccination of herd) |
| Frequency of testing and vaccination | 365 days |
| Vaccine efficiency in abortion and PI reduction | 85% (Newcomer et al. |
| Trade rate | 0.02 per day [from 5 (median) and 9.3 (mean) of purchased replacement cattle per year; Gates ( |
| Discount rate | 5% per annum |
Fig. 1Phase diagram demonstrating the epidemiological and farm processes in a single closed farm.
Fig. 2Time profiles for a single farm with no control under various disease transmissibilities (low 0.005, low-medium 0.01, medium 0.015, high 0.03) showing (a) number of susceptible (solid line), transiently infected (dotted line) and recovered (dashed line) cattle during the epidemic stage, (b) number of ‘recovered: early-pregnancy’ (dashed line) and persistently infecteds (PIs) (solid line), (c) number of calves and (d) net revenue over 28 days. The transmissibility values are those in Table 1. Sample of 500 for each parameter value.
Fig. 3Discounted net gains for a single closed farm after 5 years following a BVD outbreak, under different disease management strategies while varying the parameters for (a) transmissibility and (b) abortion rate. Lines are means, and stars represent the upper and lower quartiles. Sample of 100 for each parameter value. TC test-culling, V vaccination, TC + V test-culling and vaccination, ND no disease.
Fig. 4Discounted net gains for the purchasing farm after 5 years following a BVD outbreak when the trading partner (selling farm) undertakes biosecurity management strategies, while varying the parameters for (a) transmissibility and (b) abortion rate. The purchasing farm has no biosecurity control. Sample of 100 for each parameter value. TC test-culling, V vaccination, TC + V test-culling and vaccination, ND no disease.
Mean Net Gains for the Purchasing Farm Depending on Biosecurity Self-Protective Measures and Controls of the Trading Partner (Seller) Following Infection in the Selling Farm.
| Seller | Purchaser | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No control | Test-cull only | Vaccination only | Test-cull and vaccination | |
| No control | £0 | £1815 | £4344 | £5199 |
| (− £4721, £6131) | (− £3426, £6413) | (£2039, £6691) | (£2784, £7577) | |
| Test-cull only | £2112 | £2734 | £5888 | £6184 |
| (− £4006, £7530) | (− £2781, £7346) | (£3654, £8183) | (£4144, £8154) | |
| Vaccination only | £5187 | £5719 | £6665 | £6634 |
| (£2840, £9005) | (£4152, £8182) | (£4474, £8874) | (£5214, £8174) | |
| Test-cull and vaccination | £5502 | £6106 | £6695 | £7189 |
| (£4033, £8204) | (£4402, £9011) | (£5085, £8361) | (£5331, £9241) | |
Values are relative to the mean compared to a baseline when no control is applied. Interquartile range provided in brackets. Default parameter values used.
Fig. 5Discounted net gains for the purchasing farm after 5 years following a BVD outbreak when applies unilaterally self-protective disease management strategies, while varying the parameters for (a) transmissibility and (b) abortion rate. The selling farm has no biosecurity control. Sample of 100 for each parameter value. TC test-culling, V vaccination, TC + V test-culling and vaccination, ND no disease.
Fig. 6Discounted net gains for a single closed farm of undertaking biosecurity disease management strategies, given a probability of outbreak in a 5-year period. For the case where there is an outbreak, we use the mean net gain values from the default parameter sets in Fig. 3. If no outbreak occurs, the farm still incurs in an annual cost of £25 for testing and £300 for vaccination.