| Literature DB >> 31803768 |
Jörn Gethmann1, Carolina Probst1, Jason Bassett2, Pascal Blunk2, Philipp Hövel2,3, Franz J Conraths1.
Abstract
Models can be used to plan, evaluate, and improve programs for animal disease control. In Germany, a nationwide compulsory program to eradicate Bovine viral diarrhea (BVD) is in force since January 2011. As it is associated with substantial expenditures, the program is currently under revision. To provide the basis for a science-based decision on the future course of BVD control in Germany, we evaluated 13 scenarios (sc1-13) with respect to the chance of reaching freedom from disease and their economic implications for a period of 20 years (2011-2030). To simulate the impact of different control strategies on disease dynamics, a disease spread model was developed. To estimate the effects of a transient infection (TI) on animal level, a gross margin analysis was performed. To assess the value of cattle that died prematurely, a valuation model was used. Finally, an economic model was developed to perform a cost-benefit analysis and to compare each control scenario with a baseline setting with no BVD control. Costs comprised the expenditures for diagnostics, vaccination, preventive culling, and trade restrictions. Benefits were animal and production losses avoided by having control measures in place. The results show that reducing the PI prevalence on animal level to 0% is only feasible in scenarios that combine antigen or antibody testing with compulsory vaccination. All other scenarios, i.e., those based exclusively on a "test and cull" approach, including the current control program, will, according to the model, not achieve freedom of BVD by 2030. On the other hand, none of the scenarios that may lead to complete BVD eradication is economically attractive [benefit-cost ratio (BCR) between 0.64 and 0.94]. The average direct costs of BVD in Germany are estimated at 113 million Euros per year (34-402 million Euros), corresponding to 28.3 million Euros per million animals. Only the concepts of the former and the current national BVD control program ("ear tag testing and culling") may reduce the BVD prevalence to 0.01% with an acceptable BCR (net present value of 222 and 238 million Euros, respectively, with a BCR of 1.22 and 1.24).Entities:
Keywords: agent-based model; bovine viral diarrhea; cost-benefit analysis; dairy cattle; disease control; economic analysis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31803768 PMCID: PMC6877714 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00406
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Overview of the 13 modeled BVD control scenarios.
| 1 | 1 | No control | ||||
| 2 | 1 | 2 | Former regulation (ear tag) | |||
| 3 | 1 | 2 | 3 | New regulation (ear tag, trade restrictions) | ||
| 4 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 1 | No control | |
| 5 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Ear tag, compulsory vaccination | |
| 6 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 5 | Ear tag | AbT 2×/year |
| 7 | 1 | 2 | 3 | AbT 1×/year | ||
| 8 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 6 | Ear tag, compulsory vaccination | AbT 2×/year |
| 9 | 1 | 2 | 3 | AbT 1×/year | ||
| 10 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 7 | AbT 2×/year | |
| 11 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 8 | Compulsory vaccination, stop testing | Inmediate stop |
| 12 | 1 | 2 | 3 | Slow stop | ||
| 13 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 9 | Compulsory vaccination | AbT 2×/year |
The different colors represent different strategies. Each scenario is a chronological order of strategies; each strategy consists of a combination of measures.
Figure 1Predicted PI prevalence between 2010 and 2030 for each BVD scenario. (A) Start of the former BVD regulation (sc2). (B) Start of new BVD regulation (sc3). (C) Start of alternative scenarios (sc4–sc13).
Prevalence of PI and BVD antibody-positive animals (recovered or vaccinated).
| Scenario 01 | 0.894 | 46.91 |
| Scenario 02 | 0.010 | 4.36 |
| Scenario 03 | 0.009 | 3.17 |
| Scenario 04 | 0.317 | 18.93 |
| Scenario 05* | 0.000 | 75.49 |
| Scenario 06 | 0.011 | 3.49 |
| Scenario 07 | 0.010 | 3.82 |
| Scenario 08* | 0.000 | 75.59 |
| Scenario 09* | 0.000 | 75.61 |
| Scenario 10 | 0.053 | 6.53 |
| Scenario 11* | 0.026 | 75.95 |
| Scenario 12* | 0.026 | 75.98 |
| Scenario 13* | 0.000 | 75.62 |
Scenarios that include vaccination are marked with an asterisk (*).
Figure 2Impact of a transient BVD infection in a dairy cow: (A) Histogram of the total losses. (B) Influence of the increased calving interval. (C) Influence of the decreased milk yield on the losses.
Estimated market value of cattle of different age classes.
| Mean | 304.4 | ··· | 902.3 | ··· | 1,616.8 | 1,673.4 | 1,729.9 | 1,855.1 | 1,913.9 | 1,972.6 | 1,451.4 |
| Min | 165.1 | ··· | 489.3 | ··· | 876.7 | 907.4 | 938.0 | 1,005.9 | 1,037.8 | 1,069.6 | 376.9 |
| 1st Qu | 276.6 | ··· | 819.9 | ··· | 1,469.1 | 1,520.5 | 1,571.9 | 1,685.7 | 1,739.0 | 1,792.4 | 1,260.8 |
| Median | 316.2 | ··· | 937.4 | ··· | 1,679.7 | 1,738.4 | 1,797.1 | 1,927.2 | 1,988.2 | 2,049.2 | 1,493.8 |
| 3rd Qu | 339.8 | ··· | 1,007.4 | ··· | 1,805.0 | 1,868.1 | 1,931.2 | 2,071.0 | 2,136.6 | 2,202.1 | 1,682.6 |
| Max | 358.6 | ··· | 1,062.9 | ··· | 1,904.5 | 1,971.1 | 2,037.7 | 2,185.2 | 2,254.4 | 2,323.5 | 1,936.3 |
Total costs (direct and indirect costs) per scenario (million Euros) with minimum and maximum values.
| sc1 | 2,258 | 1,821 | 3,497 |
| sc2 | 1,933 | 1,614 | 2,540 |
| sc3 | 1,909 | 1,602 | 2,469 |
| sc4 | 1,413 | 1,162 | 2,195 |
| sc5 | 2,525 | 2,167 | 3,139 |
| sc6 | 3,655 | 2,966 | 4,520 |
| sc7 | 2,511 | 2,122 | 3,214 |
| sc8 | 7,229 | 5,567 | 9,128 |
| sc9 | 2,703 | 2,308 | 3,287 |
| sc10 | 2,680 | 2,094 | 3,488 |
| sc11 | 1,812 | 1,503 | 2,402 |
| sc12 | 1,769 | 1,430 | 2,534 |
| sc13 | 2,747 | 2,206 | 3,498 |
Figure 3Direct and indirect costs incurred 2011–2030 in the 13 simulated scenarios.
(A) Undiscounted and (B) discounted benefit (B/PVB), indirect cost (IC/PVIC), benefit-cost ratio (BCR), and net value (NV/NPV) of the 13 simulated scenarios (in million Euros).
| sc1 | ||||||||
| sc2 | 1.897 | 1.573 | 1,22 | 324 | 1.437 | 1.216 | 1,18 | 222 |
| sc3 | 1.915 | 1.566 | 1,24 | 349 | 1.449 | 1.211 | 1,2 | 238 |
| sc4 | 1.413 | 569 | 1,1 | 844 | 1.097 | 524 | 2,09 | 572 |
| sc5 | 1.972 | 2.240 | 0,92 | −268 | 1.488 | 1.658 | 0,9 | −170 |
| sc6 | 1.898 | 3.295 | 0,69 | −1.397 | 1.437 | 2.433 | 0,59 | −996 |
| sc7 | 1.901 | 2.154 | 0,92 | −253 | 1.439 | 1.633 | 0,88 | −193 |
| sc8 | 1.976 | 6.947 | 0,52 | −4.971 | 1.491 | 4.837 | 0,31 | −3.346 |
| sc9 | 1.978 | 2.423 | 0,87 | −445 | 1.492 | 1.785 | 0,84 | −293 |
| sc10 | 1.831 | 2.253 | 0,93 | −423 | 1.388 | 1.710 | 0,81 | −322 |
| sc11 | 1.674 | 1.229 | 1,95 | 445 | 1.266 | 959 | 1,32 | 307 |
| sc12 | 1.785 | 1.296 | 1,51 | 489 | 1.351 | 1.014 | 1,33 | 337 |
| sc13 | 1.934 | 2.424 | 0,94 | −490 | 1.458 | 1.772 | 0,82 | −314 |
The discounting rate is 3%.
Figure 4Comparison of the PI prevalence in reality (source: HIT, blue circles, left axis) and simulated in the DSM, scenario sc3 (red stars, right axis).