Literature DB >> 33174371

Using a participatory qualitative risk assessment to estimate the risk of introduction and spread of transboundary animal diseases in scarce-data environments: A Spatial Qualitative Risk Analysis applied to foot-and-mouth disease in Tunisia 2014-2019.

Jamel Cherni1, Caroline Coste2,3, Cécile Squarzoni-Diaw4,2, Elena Arsevska2,3, Sana Kalthoum1, Pachka Hammami4,2, Assia Daoudi5, Mohamed Karim Laoufi5, Yassir Lezaar6, Kechna Rachid6, Ismaila Seck7,8, Bezeid Ould Elmamy9,10, Barry Yahya9, Barbara Dufour11, Pascal Hendrikx3,12, Eric Cardinale4,2, Facundo Muñoz2,3, Renaud Lancelot2,3.   

Abstract

This article presents a participative and iterative qualitative risk assessment framework that can be used to evaluate the spatial variation of the risk of infectious animal disease introduction and spread on a national scale. The framework was developed through regional training action workshops and field activities. The active involvement of national animal health services enabled the identification, collection and hierarchization of risk factors. Quantitative data were collected in the field, and expert knowledge was integrated to adjust the available data at regional level. Experts categorized and combined the risk factors into ordinal levels of risk per epidemiological unit to ease implementation of risk-based surveillance in the field. The framework was used to perform a qualitative assessment of the risk of introduction and spread of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in Tunisia as part of a series of workshops held between 2015 and 2018. The experts in attendance combined risk factors such as epidemiological status, transboundary movements, proximity to the borders and accessibility to assess the risk of FMD outbreaks in Tunisia. Out of the 2,075 Tunisian imadas, 23 were at a very high risk of FMD introduction, mainly at the borders; and 59 were at a very high risk of FMD spread. To validate the model, the results were compared to the FMD outbreaks notified by Tunisia during the 2014 FMD epizootic. Using a spatial Poisson model, a significant alignment between the very high and high-risk categories of spread and the occurrence of FMD outbreaks was shown. The relative risk of FMD occurrence was thus 3.2 higher for imadas in the very high and high spread risk categories than for imadas in the low and negligible spread risk categories. Our results show that the qualitative risk assessment framework can be a useful decision support tool for risk-based disease surveillance and control, in particular in scarce-data environments.
© 2020 Wiley-VCH GmbH.

Entities:  

Keywords:  animal movements; risk assessment; risk mapping; transboundary animal diseases

Year:  2021        PMID: 33174371     DOI: 10.1111/tbed.13920

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transbound Emerg Dis        ISSN: 1865-1674            Impact factor:   5.005


  2 in total

1.  Risk-based serological survey of bluetongue and the first evidence of bluetongue virus serotype 26 circulation in Tunisia.

Authors:  Kalthoum Sana; Sghaier Soufien; Ben Hassine Thameur; Teodori Liana; Spedicato Massimo; Guesmi Kaouther; Gharbi Raja; Hajlaoui Haikel; Bel Haj Mohamed Bassem; Khalfaoui Wiem; Lachtar Monia; Ben Salem Ameni; Fatnassi Naouel; Dhaouadi Anissa; Ben Ali Mehdi; Thabet Sarah; Seghaier Chedia; Savini Giovanni; Hammami Salah
Journal:  Vet Med Sci       Date:  2022-05-05

2.  Self-Reporting of Risk Pathways and Parameter Values for Foot-and-Mouth Disease in Slaughter Cattle from Alternative Production Systems by Kenyan and Ugandan Veterinarians.

Authors:  Julie Adamchick; Karl M Rich; Andres M Perez
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2021-10-20       Impact factor: 5.048

  2 in total

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