Literature DB >> 31587878

Game theory of vaccination and depopulation for managing livestock diseases and zoonoses on small-scale farms.

Alexis Delabouglise1, Maciej F Boni2.   

Abstract

Livestock producers adapt their farm management to epidemiological risks in different ways, through veterinary interventions but also by modulating their farm size and the removal rate of animals. The objective of this theoretical study was to elucidate how these behavioral adaptations may affect the epidemiology of highly-pathogenic avian influenza in domestic poultry and the outcome of the implemented control policies. We studied a symmetric population game where the players are broiler poultry farmers at risk of infection and where the between-farms disease transmission is both environmental and mediated by poultry trade. Three types of farmer behaviors were modelled: vaccination, depopulation, and cessation of poultry farming. We found that the transmission level of the disease through trade networks has strong qualitative effects on the system's epidemiological-economic equilibria. In the case of low trade-based transmission, when the monetary cost of infection is high, depopulation behavior can maintain a stable disease-free equilibrium. In addition, vaccination behavior can lead to eradication by private incentives alone - an outcome not seen for human diseases. In a scenario of high trade-based transmission, depopulation behavior has perverse epidemiological effects as it accelerates the spread of disease via poultry trade. In this situation, state interventions should focus on making vaccination technologies available at a low price rather than penalizing infected farms.
Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31587878     DOI: 10.1016/j.epidem.2019.100370

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epidemics        ISSN: 1878-0067            Impact factor:   4.396


  4 in total

1.  An ethnobiological study on traditional knowledge associated  with black-boned sheep (Ovis aries) in Northwest Yunnan, China.

Authors:  Yanxiao Fan; Zhuo Cheng; Bo Liu; Xian Hu; Maroof Ali; Chunlin Long
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2022-05-17       Impact factor: 3.404

2.  Socially vs. Privately Optimal Control of Livestock Diseases: A Case for Integration of Epidemiology and Economics.

Authors:  Ângelo J Mendes; Daniel T Haydon; Emma McIntosh; Nick Hanley; Jo E B Halliday
Journal:  Front Vet Sci       Date:  2020-11-25

3.  How growers make decisions impacts plant disease control.

Authors:  Rachel E Murray-Watson; Frédéric M Hamelin; Nik J Cunniffe
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2022-08-22       Impact factor: 4.779

4.  Poultry farmer response to disease outbreaks in smallholder farming systems in southern Vietnam.

Authors:  Alexis Delabouglise; Nguyen Thi Le Thanh; Huynh Thi Ai Xuyen; Benjamin Nguyen-Van-Yen; Phung Ngoc Tuyet; Ha Minh Lam; Maciej F Boni
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2020-08-25       Impact factor: 8.140

  4 in total

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