Risk of Foot-and-Mouth Disease spread due to sole occupancy authorities and linked cattle holdings.

Livestock movements in Great Britain are well recorded, have been extensively analysed with respect to their role in disease spread, and have been used in real time to advise governments on the control of infectious diseases. Typically, livestock holdings are treated as distinct entities that must o...

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Main Authors: Richard J Orton, Paul R Bessell, Colin P D Birch, Anthony O'Hare, Rowland R Kao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3331861?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-5719ea145b7a4ea2bac04057439b43a62020-11-25T02:36:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0174e3508910.1371/journal.pone.0035089Risk of Foot-and-Mouth Disease spread due to sole occupancy authorities and linked cattle holdings.Richard J OrtonPaul R BessellColin P D BirchAnthony O'HareRowland R KaoLivestock movements in Great Britain are well recorded, have been extensively analysed with respect to their role in disease spread, and have been used in real time to advise governments on the control of infectious diseases. Typically, livestock holdings are treated as distinct entities that must observe movement standstills upon receipt of livestock, and must report livestock movements. However, there are currently two dispensations that can exempt holdings from either observing standstills or reporting movements, namely the Sole Occupancy Authority (SOA) and Cattle Tracing System (CTS) Links, respectively. In this report we have used a combination of data analyses and computational modelling to investigate the usage and potential impact of such linked holdings on the size of a Foot-and-Mouth Disease (FMD) epidemic. Our analyses show that although SOAs are abundant, their dynamics appear relatively stagnant. The number of CTS Links is also abundant, and increasing rapidly. Although most linked holdings are only involved in a single CTS Link, some holdings are involved in numerous links that can be amalgamated to form "CTS Chains" which can be both large and geographically dispersed. Our model predicts that under a worst case scenario of "one infected - all infected", SOAs do pose a risk of increasing the size (in terms of number of infected holdings) of a FMD epidemic, but this increase is mainly due to intra-SOA infection spread events. Furthermore, although SOAs do increase the geographic spread of an epidemic, this increase is predominantly local. Whereas, CTS Chains pose a risk of increasing both the size and the geographical spread of the disease substantially, under a worse case scenario. Our results highlight the need for further investigations into whether CTS Chains are transmission chains, and also investigations into intra-SOA movements and livestock distributions due to the lack of current data.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3331861?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Richard J Orton
Paul R Bessell
Colin P D Birch
Anthony O'Hare
Rowland R Kao
spellingShingle Richard J Orton
Paul R Bessell
Colin P D Birch
Anthony O'Hare
Rowland R Kao
Risk of Foot-and-Mouth Disease spread due to sole occupancy authorities and linked cattle holdings.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Richard J Orton
Paul R Bessell
Colin P D Birch
Anthony O'Hare
Rowland R Kao
author_sort Richard J Orton
title Risk of Foot-and-Mouth Disease spread due to sole occupancy authorities and linked cattle holdings.
title_short Risk of Foot-and-Mouth Disease spread due to sole occupancy authorities and linked cattle holdings.
title_full Risk of Foot-and-Mouth Disease spread due to sole occupancy authorities and linked cattle holdings.
title_fullStr Risk of Foot-and-Mouth Disease spread due to sole occupancy authorities and linked cattle holdings.
title_full_unstemmed Risk of Foot-and-Mouth Disease spread due to sole occupancy authorities and linked cattle holdings.
title_sort risk of foot-and-mouth disease spread due to sole occupancy authorities and linked cattle holdings.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Livestock movements in Great Britain are well recorded, have been extensively analysed with respect to their role in disease spread, and have been used in real time to advise governments on the control of infectious diseases. Typically, livestock holdings are treated as distinct entities that must observe movement standstills upon receipt of livestock, and must report livestock movements. However, there are currently two dispensations that can exempt holdings from either observing standstills or reporting movements, namely the Sole Occupancy Authority (SOA) and Cattle Tracing System (CTS) Links, respectively. In this report we have used a combination of data analyses and computational modelling to investigate the usage and potential impact of such linked holdings on the size of a Foot-and-Mouth Disease (FMD) epidemic. Our analyses show that although SOAs are abundant, their dynamics appear relatively stagnant. The number of CTS Links is also abundant, and increasing rapidly. Although most linked holdings are only involved in a single CTS Link, some holdings are involved in numerous links that can be amalgamated to form "CTS Chains" which can be both large and geographically dispersed. Our model predicts that under a worst case scenario of "one infected - all infected", SOAs do pose a risk of increasing the size (in terms of number of infected holdings) of a FMD epidemic, but this increase is mainly due to intra-SOA infection spread events. Furthermore, although SOAs do increase the geographic spread of an epidemic, this increase is predominantly local. Whereas, CTS Chains pose a risk of increasing both the size and the geographical spread of the disease substantially, under a worse case scenario. Our results highlight the need for further investigations into whether CTS Chains are transmission chains, and also investigations into intra-SOA movements and livestock distributions due to the lack of current data.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3331861?pdf=render
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