| Literature DB >> 31612143 |
Abstract
Many historical disease eradication campaigns have been characterized by large-scale mobilization and long-term campaigns of mass vaccination. As the duration of a program increases, the total cost also increases, but the effectiveness and sustainability decrease, sometimes resulting in premature loss of stakeholder support, field team fatigue, and failure or major set-backs. In contrast to this trench warfare approach, this paper proposes an eradication strategy modeled on guerrilla tactics: use exceptionally good, locally relevant and timely intelligence; strike rapidly and effectively in small areas; achieve your goals; and keep moving. For peste des petits ruminants eradication, this means a shift away from long-term mass vaccination, focusing instead on addressing some of the challenges that have plagued previous eradication programs: ineffective surveillance and movement management. Recent developments in surveillance have shown that it is now feasible to capture information about almost all cases of disease, all movements and all control activities, from the entire population in real time. Developing powerful, effective and sustainable surveillance systems is an essential prerequisite for rapid, affordable PPR eradication. PPR can be rapidly eliminated from small populations by achieving very high levels of vaccination coverage for only a short period. The key challenge is then to prevent the re-introduction of disease as immunity wanes, and to respond rapidly and effectively in the case of further local outbreaks. A comprehensive understanding of movement patterns and their drivers will allow rapid progressive eradication to be implemented. The population can be divided into manageably small units, targeted sequentially for high-coverage short-duration vaccination, then moving to the next unit based on the distribution of disease and the direction of animal flow. This approach optimizes the use of available resources, and minimizes the challenge and disruption of managing retrograde movement from infected to uninfected areas. High levels of community engagement are required to achieve the quality of surveillance, movement management and rapid response necessary for success. Traditionally, long-term vaccination has been used to first eliminate the virus from a population, and then to protect it against re-introduction of the disease. Under the guerrilla strategy, continuous real-time information, not long-term vaccination, is the main tool for disease eradication.Entities:
Keywords: PPR; disease eradication; movement management; strategic vaccination; surveillance; user-focused
Year: 2019 PMID: 31612143 PMCID: PMC6776087 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Figure 1Countries (green) reporting the presence of PPR to OIE as of April 2019 (8).
Figure 2Effect of progressive vaccination in a large population. The color intensity indicates population immunity. Vaccination starts at point A and progresses anticlockwise.
Rules for movements between units of different status.
: movement not allowed; : movement allowed.
Susceptible animals moving from free to control population units risk diluting the population immunity. Only animals known to be immune should be allowed to enter active control units.
Figure 3Example of a simple animal movement network diagram for four population units. The numbers beside each arrow indicate the number of animals moving between the population units.
Total number of blocked movements required during an eradication program, based on all possible sequences of eradication in four population units (A, B, C, and D) as illustrated in Figure 3.
| ABCD | 35 | DABC | 176 | DBAC | 418 | DBCA | 728 |
| ABDC | 37 | DACB | 202 | DCAB | 422 | DCBA | 736 |
| ACBD | 48 | CABD | 205 | BDAC | 438 | BDCA | 748 |
| ADBC | 56 | BACD | 227 | CDAB | 440 | CDBA | 754 |
| ACDB | 79 | BADC | 229 | CBAD | 469 | CBDA | 762 |
| ADCB | 82 | CADB | 236 | BCAD | 474 | BCDA | 767 |
Figure 4Distribution of the number of blocked movements for goats on Java, over 100,000 random sequences of control.
Figure 5Best identified sequence of control for goats on Java island, to minimize disruption of animal movements. Red indicates the first districts, yellow the last districts in the sequence.
Figure 6Distribution of the number of blocked movements in New Zealand, over 100,000 random sequences of control.
Figure 7Best identified sequence of control for New Zealand, to minimize disruption of animal movements. Red indicates the first districts, yellow the last districts in the sequence.
Figure 8Average goat price surface for Karnataka state in 2018 with 500 rupee contours.
Figure 9Percentage of monthly disease surveillance field activity reports for Cameroon submitted to the national authorities from 2005 to 2009 (38).
Figure 10Summary of iSIKHNAS reporting from January 2014 to March 2019 for 3 of the 30 modules: Priority disease reports (number of reports, left axis), livestock movement reports (number of reports divided by 10, left axis), and treatment reports (proportion of routine disease reports with linked treatment data, percentage, right axis).
Selection of key challenges facing global PPR eradication, and an indication of how different components of the guerrilla strategy (phases 1–3) may be able to address them (see footnotes for clarification of the challenges and components).
| Inadequate communication with owners | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||||||||
| Physical access to flocks | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | |||||||
| Owner compliance | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||||||||
| Inadequate supply of vaccine | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||||||||
| Inadequate time/human resources | ||||||||||||||
| Corruption within vaccination teams | • | • | • | • | • | |||||||||
| Time required to vaccinate the population | • | • | • | • | • | |||||||||
| Choice of vaccine | • | • | ||||||||||||
| Poor quality control and potency | • | • | ||||||||||||
| Poor handling and cold chain | • | • | • | |||||||||||
| Poor vaccination technique | • | • | ||||||||||||
| Stress, malnutrition, concurrent | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||||||||
| Maternal immunity | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||||||||
| New lambs/kids diluting immune population | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||||||||
| Movement from infected areas | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | |||||
| Movement from free areas diluting immunity | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | |||||
| Understanding movement pathways | • | • | • | • | • | |||||||||
| Flock or animal identification | • | • | • | • | • | |||||||||
| Market distortion due to movement management | • | • | • | • | • | |||||||||
| Farmer non-compliance with movement restrictions | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||||||||
| Transhumant or migratory production systems | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||||||||
| Cross-border movement patterns | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | |||||||
| Rapid changes in movement patterns | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | |||||
| Low disease reporting rates | • | • | • | • | • | |||||||||
| Low farmer awareness | • | • | • | • | ||||||||||
| Poor field communication | • | • | • | • | ||||||||||
| Fear of negative consequences for reporting | • | • | • | • | ||||||||||
| Lack of veterinary field surveillance resources | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | |||||||
| Delay in receiving field reports of suspect outbreaks | • | • | • | • | • | |||||||||
| Inadequate capacity for rapid field investigation | • | • | • | |||||||||||
| Inadequate laboratory diagnostic support | • | |||||||||||||
| Lack of sustainability of systems developed for PPR eradication | • | • | • | • | ||||||||||
User-focused surveillance: a surveillance systems designed around users' needs, capturing data on all diseases of significance to farmers, and designed to maximize direct user benefits while eliminating any costs or risks associated with participation.
Information system: a real-time integrated health and production information system, with field mobile data capture, automated analysis and alerts, managing (at least) disease reports, animal/flock identification, vaccination, control activities, movement management, and emergency response.
Information: detailed, real-time information on animal populations, animal movements, disease distribution, immune status, resources and capacity, vaccination and disease control activities.
Funding: Coordinated, adequate and sustained funding through international donors and national budgets.
Laboratory and vaccine: Adequate laboratory diagnostic and monitoring capacity and quality control, and access to high quality adequate vaccine supplies (these issues have been well-addressed in existing PPR eradication strategies).
Strategic implementation: Technical analysis of the appropriately sized and delimited population units, the sequence and timing of eradication.
Small units: Definition of small population units as the building blocks for eradication, where available resources can be concentrated to achieve very high coverage, high quality vaccination for disease elimination.
Rapid progression: Rapidly moving in an optimal sequence through all infected population units eliminating the virus and managing movement.
Farmer reporting: an effective, highly sensitive and timely farmer-based early warning reporting system, built on effective farmer engagement and the user-focused surveillance, to achieve rapid reporting of all suspect disease events.
Rapid response: rapid response capacity within the veterinary services working in partnership with local communities, including mobile investigation and response teams, pen-side and laboratory diagnostic capacity, and appropriate local response strategies (vaccination, stamping out, quarantine etc. as required).
Poor immune response: Of the various reasons for failure to achieve high flock immunity, stress, malnutrition, concurrent disease and similar problems are among the most difficult to address. Working with farmers to minimize these conditions, and optimizing timing may help.