Eradicating BVD, reviewing Irish programme data and model predictions to support prospective decision making

•Multi-source research supports the strategic eradication of Bovine Viral Diarrhoea virus (BVDV) from Irish cattle population.•International experience, detailed programme data and predictive dynamic systems modelling are integrated.•Chance and risk of strategy options are quantified and reveal a su...

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Veröffentlicht in:Preventive veterinary medicine 2018-02, Vol.150, p.151-161
Hauptverfasser: Thulke, H.-H., Lange, M., Tratalos, J.A., Clegg, T.A., McGrath, G., O’Grady, L., O’Sullivan, P., Doherty, M.L., Graham, D.A., More, S.J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Multi-source research supports the strategic eradication of Bovine Viral Diarrhoea virus (BVDV) from Irish cattle population.•International experience, detailed programme data and predictive dynamic systems modelling are integrated.•Chance and risk of strategy options are quantified and reveal a successful eradication programme.•According to lessons learnt, rumours, attitudes and expectations influence anticipated future outcomes.•Investment in rigorous quantitative assessment does prevent misguided calls for action. Bovine Viral Diarrhoea is an infectious production disease of major importance in many cattle sectors of the world. The infection is predominantly transmitted by animal contact. Postnatal infections are transient, leading to immunologically protected cattle. However, for a certain window of pregnancy, in utero infection of the foetus results in persistently infected (PI) calves being the major risk of BVD spread, but also an efficient target for controlling the infection. There are two acknowledged strategies to identify PI animals for removal: tissue tag testing (direct; also known as the Swiss model) and serological screening (indirect by interpreting the serological status of the herd; the Scandinavian model). Both strategies are effective in reducing PI prevalence and herd incidence. During the first four years of the Irish national BVD eradication programme (2013–16), it has been mandatory for all newborn calves to be tested using tissue tag testing. During this period, PI incidence has substantially declined. In recent times, there has been interest among stakeholders in a change to an indirect testing strategy, with potential benefit to the overall programme, particularly with respect to cost to farmers. Advice was sought on the usefulness of implementing the necessary changes. Here we review available data from the national eradication programme and strategy performance predictions from an expert system model to quantify expected benefits of the strategy change from strategic, budgetary and implementation points of view. Key findings from our work include (i) drawbacks associated with changes to programme implementation, in particular the loss of epidemiological information to allow real-time monitoring of eradication progress or to reliably predict time to eradication, (ii) the fact that only 25% of the herds in the Irish cattle sector (14% beef, 78% dairy herds) would benefit financially from a change to serosurveillance, with half
ISSN:0167-5877
1873-1716
DOI:10.1016/j.prevetmed.2017.11.017