| Literature DB >> 31603929 |
Richard Bradhurst1, Graeme Garner2, Iain East2, Clare Death2, Aaron Dodd1, Tom Kompas1.
Abstract
An incursion of Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in a previously FMD-free country can cause significant economic damage from immediate and prolonged closure of FMD-sensitive markets. Whilst emergency vaccination may help contain disease, the presence of vaccinated animals complicates post-outbreak management and the recovery of FMD-free status for return to trade. We present enhancements to the Australian Animal DISease (AADIS) model that allow comparisons of post-outbreak management strategies for vaccinated animals, for the purposes of securing the earliest possible return to trade. Two case studies are provided that compare the retention of vaccinated animals with removal for waste/salvage, and the impact on recovery of FMD-sensitive markets per OIE guidelines. It was found that a vaccinate-and-retain strategy was associated with lower post-outbreak management costs, however this advantage was outweighed by significantly higher trade losses. Under the assumptions of the study there was no cost advantage to salvaging the removed vaccinated animals.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31603929 PMCID: PMC6788736 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223518
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Advantages and disadvantages of different management strategies for FMD vaccinated animals.
| Strategy | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Vaccinate-and-retain | No costs of removing animals (slaughter, disposal, compensation) No loss of genetics Continuity of production Producer goodwill Vaccinated animals have a value More public acceptance | Longer time to achieve FMD-free status Delayed return to markets Additional surveillance costs Separate slaughter and product processing chains to safeguard exports to FMD-free markets Additional product processing costs Record keeping and information management Finding new markets |
| Vaccinate-and-remove-to-waste | Shorter time to achieve FMD-free status Earlier return to markets | Compensation for mandatory acquisition and slaughter of stock Vaccinated animals have no value Animal processing and disposal costs Production loss Loss of genetics Producer resentment Less public acceptance |
| Vaccinate-and-remove-for-salvage | Shorter time to achieve FMD-free status Earlier return to markets Vaccinated animals may have some residual value | Compensation for mandatory acquisition and slaughter of stock Production loss Loss of genetics Producer resentment Animal processing costs Additional product processing costs Finding new markets |
Modelled aspects of post-outbreak management of vaccinated animals.
| Strategy | Surveillance | Destruction | Disposal | Disinfection | Compensation | OIE waiting period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vaccination disabled | No | No | No | No | No | 3 months |
| Vaccinate-and-retain | Yes | No | No | No | No | 6 months |
| Vaccinate-and-remove to-waste | No | Yes | Yes | No | Full | 3 months |
| Vaccinate-and-remove-for-salvage | No | Yes | No | No | Partial | 3 months |
FMD vaccination cost estimates per head by species.
| Species | Labour (A$) | Vaccine (A$) | Cold storage and handling (A$) | Total cost (A$) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cattle | 3.00 | 1.20 | 0.80 | 5.00 |
| Sheep | 3.00 | 0.60 | 0.80 | 4.40 |
| Pigs | 3.00 | 1.20 | 0.80 | 5.00 |
| Other | 3.00 | 1.20 | 0.80 | 5.00 |
†any species present in a smallholder herd (defined as less than 50 animals on less than 20 hectares)
Cost estimates for post-outbreak management of FMD vaccinated animals per head by species.
| Species | Destruction (A$) | Disposal (A$) | Compensation for waste (A$) | Compensation for salvage (A$) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cattle (intensive/extensive) | 6.00 | 67.50 | 742.50 | 371.25 |
| Cattle (feedlot) | 6.00 | 67.50 | 872.00 | 436.00 |
| Cattle (dairy) | 6.00 | 67.50 | 895.00 | 447.50 |
| Sheep | 4.00 | 2.25 | 69.00 | 34.50 |
| Pigs | 4.00 | 9.00 | 222.50 | 111.25 |
| Other | 3.00 | 2.25 | 150.00 | 75.00 |
†any species present in a smallholder herd
Estimated removal rate of FMD vaccinated animals (head per day).
| Species | Removal rate to waste (head/day) | Removal rate for salvage (head/day) |
|---|---|---|
| Cattle | 1000 | 800 |
| Sheep | 5000 | 4000 |
| Pigs | 2000 | 1600 |
| Other | 2600 | 2080 |
†any species present in a smallholder herd
Fig 1Infected herds (n = 18) in the simulated VIC FMD outbreak scenario at the end of the 14-day silent spread period.
Control parameter settings for the VIC FMD case study.
| Component | Description |
|---|---|
| Movement restrictions | 3-day national livestock standstill Control Area (CA) initially the whole of state of Victoria reducing to a 10 km radius around each IP after 14 days Restricted Area (RA) initially a 10 km radius around each IP reducing to 3 km after 14 days |
| Stamping out | Culling of all susceptible animals on confirmed IPs only |
| Vaccination | Emergency vaccination (3 km radius around IPs) of cattle (plus sheep on mixed cattle-sheep properties only) Commences on the 14th day of control program Applied only in previously identified high risk regions Vaccination around new IPs only (i.e., no retrospective vaccination) |
| Surveillance and tracing | Investigation of all reported suspect premises Periodic visits to premises in RA Tracing of direct and indirect movements onto and off IPs |
| Resources | Three surveillance teams available at the start of the control program ramping up a maximum of 50 teams over a 3-week period Two culling teams available at the start of the control program ramping up to a maximum of 25 teams over a 4-week period Five disposal teams available at the start of the control program ramping up to a maximum of 40 teams over a 30-day period Vaccination carried out by lay vaccinators (i.e., not constrained by the availability of veterinarians) |
Fig 2Infected herds (n = 20) in the simulated WA FMD outbreak scenario at the end of the 14-day silent spread period.
Control parameter settings for the WA FMD case study.
| Component | Description |
|---|---|
| Movement restrictions | 3-day national livestock standstill CA initially the whole of state of Western Australia reducing to a 25 km radius around each IP after 14 days, and a 10 km radius after 28 days RA initially the whole of the local government area enclosing each IP, reducing to a 10 km radius around each IP after 14 days, and a 3 km radius after 28 days |
| Stamping out | Culling of all susceptible animals on confirmed IPs only |
| Vaccination | Emergency vaccination (3 km radius around IPs) of cattle (plus sheep on mixed cattle-sheep properties only) Commences on the 14th day of control program Applied only in previously identified high risk areas Vaccination around new IPs only (i.e., no retrospective vaccination) |
| Surveillance and tracing | Investigation of all reported suspect premises Periodic visits to premises in RA Tracing of direct and indirect movements onto and off IPs |
| Resources | Four surveillance teams available at the start of the control program ramping up to a maximum of 30 teams over a 3-week period One culling team available at the start of the control program ramping up to a maximum of 20 teams over a 4-week period Four disposal teams available at the start of the control program ramping up to a maximum of 22 teams over a 30-day period Vaccination carried out by lay vaccinators (i.e., not constrained by the availability of veterinarians) |
Statistical summary of vaccination and non-vaccination control strategies for the VIC FMD outbreak scenario.
| Stamping out only mean (95% CI) | Stamping out plus vaccination mean (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of IPs | 144.1 (138.8, 149.5)a | 98.3 (96.2, 100.4)b |
| Outbreak duration (days) | 123.6 (120.6, 126.7)a | 84.7 (83.6, 85.7)b |
| Cost of control program (A$ million) | 67.44 (65.29, 69.67)a | 45.90 (45.03, 46.79)b |
| Number of animals culled | 38728 (37318, 40191)a | 27654 (26986, 28338)b |
† Within rows, figures with differing superscripts are significantly different (p < 0.05)
Fig 3Comparison of vaccination and non-vaccination control strategies for the VIC FMD outbreak scenario.
Fig 4Control and post-outbreak managements costs for different post-outbreak management strategies in the VIC FMD outbreak scenario.
Fig 5Loss of trade and total outbreak costs for different post-outbreak management strategies in the VIC FMD outbreak scenario.
Statistical summary of different post-outbreak management strategies for the VIC FMD outbreak scenario.
| Model outcome variable | Vaccinate-and-retain mean (95% CI) | Vaccinate-and-remove-to-waste mean (95% CI) | Vaccinate-and-remove-for-salvage mean (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of IPs | 98.7 (96.7, 100.7)a | 98.1 (96.1, 100.1)a | 98.9 (96.9, 100.9)a |
| Number of vaccinated premises (VPs) | 193.1 (188.2, 198.1)a | 191.2 (186.4, 196.1)a | 194.7 (189.8, 199.8)a |
| Control program duration (days) | 86.9 (85.9, 88.0)a | 86.1 (85.1, 87.1)a | 86.6 (85.6, 87.6)a |
| Surveillance costs (A$ million) | 1.38 (1.35, 1.40)a | 1.36 (1.34, 1.39)a | 1.38 (1.35, 1.40)a |
| Culling, disposal & decontamination costs (A$ million) | 5.58 (5.46, 5.70)a | 5.54 (5.42, 5.67)a | 5.61 (5.48, 5.73)a |
| Compensation costs (A$ million) | 17.23 (16.82, 17.65)a | 17.16 (16.75, 17.59)a | 17.40 (16.97, 17.83)a |
| Vaccination costs (A$ million) | 0.20 (0.20, 0.21)a | 0.20 (0.20, 0.21)a | 0.20 (0.20. 0.21)a |
| Control centre costs (A$ million) | 31.41 (30.92, 31.90)a | 31.15 (30.64, 31.66)a | 30.88 (30.40, 31.37)a |
| Post outbreak surveillance duration (days) | 42.1 (41.5, 42.7)a | 40.3 (39.7, 40.8)b | 40.5 (39.9, 41.1)b |
| Post outbreak surveillance costs (A$ million) | 2.94 (2.90, 2.99)a | 2.93 (2.89, 2.98)a | 2.95 (2.91, 3.00)a |
| Post outbreak laboratory costs (A$ million) | 2.83 (2.79, 2.87)a | 2.53 (2.50, 2.56)b | 2.54 (2.50, 2.57)b |
| Post outbreak culling, disposal and decontamination costs (A$ million) | 0.00 (0.00, 0.00)a | 2.07 (2.02, 2.12)b | 0.00 (0.00, 0.00)a |
| Post outbreak compensation costs (A$ million) | 0.00 (0.00, 0.00)a | 23.05 (22.49, 23.62)b | 11.99 (11.69, 12.31)c |
| Days out of market | 236.6 (235.5, 237.7)a | 215.2 (213.3, 217.1)b | 216.6 (214.7, 218.5)b |
| Loss of trade (A$ million) | 7575.32 (7540.12, 7610.68)a | 6886.47 (6826.06, 6947.42)b | 6931.25 (6870.92, 6992.92)b |
† Within rows, figures with differing superscripts are significantly different (p < 0.05)
Statistical summary of vaccination and non-vaccination control strategies for the WA FMD outbreak scenario.
| Stamping out only mean (95% CI) | Stamping out plus vaccination mean (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of IPs | 46.3 (45.7, 47.0)a | 42.9 (42.4, 43.4)b |
| Outbreak duration (days) | 71.8 (70.7, 72.9)a | 65.7 (65.2, 66.2)b |
| Cost of control program (A$ million) | 29.70 (29.30, 30.10)a | 27.44 (27.22, 27.67)b |
| Number of animals culled | 16282 (16026, 16543)a | 15497 (15267, 15731)b |
† Within rows, figures with differing superscripts are significantly different (p < 0.05)
Fig 6Comparison of vaccination and non-vaccination control strategies for the WA FMD outbreak scenario.
Fig 7Control and post-outbreak managements costs for different post-outbreak management strategies in the WA FMD outbreak scenario.
Fig 8Loss of trade and total outbreak costs for different post-outbreak management strategies in the WA FMD outbreak scenario.
Statistical summary of different post-outbreak management strategies for the WA FMD outbreak scenario.
| Model outcome variable | Vaccinate-and-retain mean (95% CI) | Vaccinate-and-remove-to-waste mean (95% CI) | Vaccinate-and-remove-for-salvage mean (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of IPs | 43.8 (43.3, 44.4)a | 43.5 (43.0, 44.0)a | 43.7 (43.2, 44.2)a |
| Number of VPs | 49.1 (48.3, 49.8)a | 48.4 (47.7, 49.2)a | 49.0 (48.2, 49.8)a |
| Control program duration (days) | 68.0 (67.6, 68.5)a | 68.3 (67.8, 68.8)a | 68.3 (67.8, 68.8)a |
| Surveillance costs (A$ million) | 0.60 (0.59, 0.60)a | 0.60 (0.59, 0.60)a | 0.60 (0.59, 0.61)a |
| Culling, disposal and decontamination costs (A$ million) | 2.40 (2.37, 2.43)a | 2.39 (2.36, 2.42)a | 2.40 (2.37, 2.43)a |
| Compensation costs (A$ million) | 8.67 (8.56, 8.78)a | 8.65 (8.54, 8.76)a | 8.69 (8.58, 8.81)a |
| Vaccination costs (A$ million) | 0.05 (0.05, 0.05)a | 0.05 (0.05, 0.05)a | 0.05 (0.05, 0.05)a |
| Control centre costs (A$ million) | 23.03 (22.85, 23.23)a | 22.86 (22.68, 23.04)a | 22.91 (22.73, 23.09)a |
| Post outbreak surveillance duration (days) | 30.3 (30.0, 30.6)a | 29.4 (29.1, 29.7)b | 29.7 (29.4, 30.1)b |
| Post outbreak surveillance costs (A$ million) | 1.70 (1.69, 1.72)a | 1.69 (1.68, 1.71)a | 1.71 (1.69, 1.73)a |
| Post outbreak laboratory costs (A$ million) | 0.82 (0.81, 0.82)a | 0.73 (0.73, 0.74)b | 0.74 (0.73, 0.75)b |
| Post outbreak culling, disposal and decontamination costs (A$ million) | 0.00 (0.00, 0.00)a | 0.45 (0.44, 0.46)b | 0.00 (0.00, 0.00)a |
| Post outbreak compensation costs (A$ million) | 0.00 (0.00, 0.00)a | 4.72 (4.62, 4.82)b | 2.40 (2.35, 2.45)c |
| Days out of market | 217.5 (217.0, 218.0)a | 165.4 (164.8, 166.0)b | 167.1 (166.5, 167.7)c |
| Loss of trade (A$ million) | 6960.66 (6943.98, 6977.38)a | 5292.28 (5274.29, 5310.34)b | 5348.31 (5329.26, 5367.42)c |
† Within rows, figures with differing superscripts are significantly different (p < 0.05)