Economic losses due to foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in Ethiopian cattle

IF 2.2 2区 农林科学 Q1 VETERINARY SCIENCES
P. Rasmussen , A.P. Shaw , W.T. Jemberu , T. Knight-Jones , B. Conrady , O.O. Apenteng , Y. Cheng , V. Muñoz , J. Rushton , P.R. Torgerson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Ethiopia’s cattle population is among the largest in Africa and is burdened by frequent foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) outbreaks. FMD is caused by several distinct and highly contagious viral strains that can result in acute disease in cattle, causing losses in productivity and impeding international trade. This economic simulation study considered four main sources of losses due to FMD in cattle: reduced milk yield, draft power yield, fertility, and increased mortality. Economic losses were estimated per case across age-sex strata in 89 Ethiopian administrative zones for the years 2010–2021 using a wide range of data to estimate distributions for 30 input variables in a series of Monte Carlo simulations. It was estimated that an average case of FMD in Ethiopian cattle results in losses (mean values reported followed 95 % confidence intervals in brackets) of US dollars (USD) 11 (USD 7–USD 16) per case. Losses resulting from an average outbreak were estimated to be USD 2300 (USD 1400–USD 3300), while national annual losses were estimated to be USD 0.9 Mil. (USD 0.2 Mil.–USD 2.3 Mil.). Per cow-year, based on a national cow population of approximately 39 Mil. head, these estimated annual losses are equivalent to losses of only USD 0.02 (USD 0.01–USD 0.06). Nationally, these losses were significantly less than previously estimated in the literature, with currently estimated losses more accurately reflecting the economic burden of FMD in Ethiopian cattle over the past decade. The relatively small estimated losses suggest that control efforts based on widespread vaccination in countries with primarily extensive cattle production systems, such as Ethiopia, are unlikely to be economically sound. Sensitivity analyses suggested losses would be far greater in intensive systems, and that certainty surrounding incidence rates is paramount to the formulation of economically sound animal healthpolicy in regions with endemic FMD.

埃塞俄比亚牛口蹄疫造成的经济损失。
埃塞俄比亚是非洲牛群最多的国家之一,口蹄疫(FMD)的频繁爆发给该国带来了沉重的负担。口蹄疫由几种不同的高传染性病毒株引起,可导致牛的急性疾病,造成生产力损失并阻碍国际贸易。这项经济模拟研究考虑了牛口蹄疫造成损失的四个主要来源:产奶量下降、役畜产量下降、繁殖力下降和死亡率上升。在一系列蒙特卡洛模拟中,使用大量数据估算了 30 个输入变量的分布情况,估算了 2010-2021 年埃塞俄比亚 89 个行政区各年龄-性别层的每例经济损失。据估计,埃塞俄比亚牛口蹄疫平均每例造成的损失(括号内为 95 % 置信区间后的平均值)为 11 美元(7-16 美元)。平均疫情造成的损失估计为 2300 美元(1400-3300 美元),而全国年损失估计为 90 万美元(20 万-230 万美元)。按照全国奶牛存栏量约为3,900万头计算,每头牛每年的损失估计仅相当于0.02美元(0.01-0.06美元)。在全国范围内,这些损失大大低于以前文献中的估计,目前估计的损失更准确地反映了过去十年埃塞俄比亚牛口蹄疫造成的经济负担。相对较小的损失估计表明,在埃塞俄比亚等主要采用粗放型养牛生产系统的国家,基于广泛接种疫苗的控制工作不太可能具有经济效益。敏感性分析表明,在集约化生产系统中,损失会更大,而且在口蹄疫流行的地区,要制定经济上合理的动物健康政策,发病率的确定性至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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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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