Literature DB >> 4544777

The elimination of echinococcosis from Iceland.

T C Beard.   

Abstract

A century ago Iceland had the highest prevalence of human hydatid disease ever recorded anywhere. Since 1864 the disease has been gradually controlled, and today there is less than one new case per decade. The sheep population of about one million, over 95% of which is subject to inspection at slaughter, has yielded only 15 infected animals in the last 20 years. In most districts farm slaughtering still persists, though on a very limited scale, and farm dogs are subjected to very little control. The main credit for the remarkable control of E. granulosus is given to education, but many accidental social and environmental factors, peculiar to Iceland, contributed to the result. Of these, the most notable were the small human population and high rate of literacy; the very high dog mortality from distemper in the 19th century, which coincided with a major export trade in live sheep; the custom of feeding dogs on cooked household scraps, the risk of infection being confined to the short sheep slaughtering season and the rare occasions when a cow or pig is slaughtered; the absence of employed labour on Icelandic farms, all slaughtering being done by the owner, an educated man with middle-class values; the change in animal husbandry since 1920 towards the slaughter of 5-month-old lambs, too young to have viable cysts; and the meat subsidy, which since 1947 has led to the use of abattoirs for all but a handful of uneconomic animals kept for slaughter on the farm.

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Mesh:

Year:  1973        PMID: 4544777      PMCID: PMC2483078     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull World Health Organ        ISSN: 0042-9686            Impact factor:   9.408


  1 in total

1.  [The last case of hydatid cyst?].

Authors:  B JONSSON
Journal:  Laeknabladid       Date:  1962       Impact factor: 0.548

  1 in total
  5 in total

1.  Use of sentinel lambs to survey the effect of an education programme on control of transmission of Echinococcus granulosus in South Powys, Wales.

Authors:  S Lloyd; T M Walters; P S Craig
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  1998       Impact factor: 9.408

2.  Hydatid disease in the Western Isles.

Authors:  I L Chisholm; M J MacVicar; H Williams
Journal:  J Hyg (Lond)       Date:  1983-02

3.  Epidemiological analysis of factors influencing rate of progress in Echinococcus granulosus control in New Zealand.

Authors:  M J Burridge; C W Schwabe
Journal:  J Hyg (Lond)       Date:  1977-04

4.  Long-term retrospective assessment of a transmission hotspot for human alveolar echinococcosis in mid-west China.

Authors:  Patrick Giraudoux; YuMin Zhao; Eve Afonso; HongBin Yan; Jenny Knapp; Michael T Rogan; DaZhong Shi; WanZhong Jia; Philip S Craig
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2019-08-30

5.  Praziquantel treatment of dogs for four consecutive years decreased the transmission of Echinococcus intermedius G7 to pigs in villages in Lithuania.

Authors:  M Šarkūnas; Ž Vienažindienė; C A Alvarez Rojas; K Radziulis; P Deplazes
Journal:  Food Waterborne Parasitol       Date:  2019-03-14
  5 in total

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