一刀切的措施不适合所有地区:利用生物经济模型评估泰国针对特定地区的口蹄疫控制措施。

IF 2.2 2区 农林科学 Q1 VETERINARY SCIENCES Preventive veterinary medicine Pub Date : 2024-10-16 DOI:10.1016/j.prevetmed.2024.106359
Thanicha Chanchaidechachai , Egil A.J. Fischer , Helmut W. Saatkamp , Mart C.M. de Jong , Henk Hogeveen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

有关控制措施的流行病学和经济后果的信息对于设计有效的口蹄疫(FMD)控制措施至关重要。获取这种信息的一种方法是建立生物经济模型。在本研究中,生物经济模型被用于评估泰国两个不同研究区域的口蹄疫控制情况:一个主要由奶牛场组成的高农场密度区域和一个混合农场类型的低农场密度区域。生物经济模型包括流行病学部分和经济学部分。在流行病学部分,利用从泰国口蹄疫疫情中估算出的传播参数构建了一个农场间随机传播模型。流行病学模型的输出结果,即受感染农场的数量、受影响农场的数量和疫情持续时间,被用作经济模型的输入,以计算经济后果。我们在模拟模型中采用了四种口蹄疫控制措施:扑杀受感染农场的牲畜、环状疫苗接种、限制动物移动和隔离受感染农场。此外,我们还考虑了养殖户遵守规定的情况,以评估其对控制措施的影响。在农场密度低的地区,模拟的口蹄疫爆发规模较小,因此控制措施对爆发规模的影响不大,也就没有正的经济回报。相反,在高养殖密度地区,如果不采取控制措施,口蹄疫的爆发规模会很大。所有措施都缩小了疫情规模,但导致的总成本不同。就控制疫情而言,扑杀感染猪场是最佳选择,但其总成本高于环状免疫接种或隔离感染猪场。就成本效益而言,接种环状疫苗是最佳措施。如果养殖户的依从性较低,所有控制措施都将无效,导致疫情爆发的总成本较高。符合要求的农场和不符合要求的农场之间的成本分配显示,除环状疫苗接种方案外,不符合要求的农场比符合要求的农场付出更多。结果表明,根据当地条件定制控制措施具有重要的经济意义,并强调了在设计控制措施时农民遵守规定的重要性。
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One-size measures do not fit all areas: Evaluation of area-specific control of foot and mouth disease in Thailand using bioeconomic modelling
Information on the epidemiological and economic consequences of control measures is fundamental to design effective foot and mouth disease (FMD) control measures. One approach to obtaining this information is through bioeconomic modelling. In this study, a bioeconomic model was used to evaluate FMD control in two different study areas in Thailand: a high farm density area predominantly consisting of dairy farms and a low farm density area with mixed farm types. The bioeconomic model consists of an epidemiological part and an economic part. For the epidemiological part, a stochastic between-farm transmission model was constructed with transmission parameters estimated from FMD outbreaks in Thailand. The outputs from the epidemiological model, i.e. the number of infected farms, the number of affected farms and the outbreak duration, are used as inputs for economic model to calculate the economic consequences. We applied the simulation model with four FMD control measures: culling the animals of infected farms, ring vaccination, animal movement restrictions and isolation of infected farms. Furthermore, we included effect of farmers' compliance to asses its effect on control measures. The simulated FMD outbreaks in the low farm density area were small, thus control measures did not greatly affect the size of outbreaks and, therefore, did not have a positive economic return. In contrast, in the high farm density area, FMD outbreaks were large without control measures. All measures reduced the size of the outbreaks but resulted in different total costs. In terms of outbreak control, culling infectious farms was the best option, but its total cost was higher than ring vaccination or isolation of infected farms. In terms of cost-effectiveness, ring vaccination was the best measure. If farmers' compliance were low, all control measures would be ineffective, resulting in high total cost of the outbreak. The cost distribution between compliant and non-compliant farms showed that non-compliant farms paid more than compliant farms, except for the ring vaccination scenario. The results emphasize the economic significance to customize control measures specific to the area's conditions and highlight the importance of farmers' compliance when designing control measures.
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来源期刊
Preventive veterinary medicine
Preventive veterinary medicine 农林科学-兽医学
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
7.70%
发文量
184
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Preventive Veterinary Medicine is one of the leading international resources for scientific reports on animal health programs and preventive veterinary medicine. The journal follows the guidelines for standardizing and strengthening the reporting of biomedical research which are available from the CONSORT, MOOSE, PRISMA, REFLECT, STARD, and STROBE statements. The journal focuses on: Epidemiology of health events relevant to domestic and wild animals; Economic impacts of epidemic and endemic animal and zoonotic diseases; Latest methods and approaches in veterinary epidemiology; Disease and infection control or eradication measures; The "One Health" concept and the relationships between veterinary medicine, human health, animal-production systems, and the environment; Development of new techniques in surveillance systems and diagnosis; Evaluation and control of diseases in animal populations.
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