Biosecurity Flashcards
Define biosecurity
prevention of disease agents entering a non-infected farm (aka bioexlcusion)
Define biocontainment
prevention of disease spreading within an infected farm or leaving a farm
What are the 4 layers of biosecurity?
- global
- regional
- national
- local
Define global biosecurity
control of infectious disease and eradication programmes of eliminating infectious risks
Define regional biosecurity
continent wide eradication and prevention of introduction of disease (keep FMD out of EU) by risk assessments, illegal transports and public awareness
Define national biosecurity
national disease control progammes to protect the national livestock population and trade (e.g. NCD)
- surveillance
- disease control measures
- contingency planning
Define local biosecurity
- to protect your own health and herds from infectious diseases
> eradicate
> keep disease free (risk factors for dz introduction and preventive measures)
> reduce the impact of introduction
What are global and reional responsibilities and limitations?
- risk assessments
- trade
- financial incentives (e.g. to become FMD free)
- available resources
Other respnsibilities and limitations
- risks increasing, resources decreasing
- trade in animal (products) and diseases
- expanding livestock area
What are national responsibilities and limitations?
- NATIONAL = responsibility of government
- AHVLA office/ defra
- based on: risk assessments, trade, financial incentives, available resources
- national boundaries not secure
Who is responsible for local control?
- government?
- owners and keepers?
- vets?
What are endemic disease risk factors?
- more than 100 cos
- introduction of > 1 cow
- mixing of different herds
- professional visitors on farm (risk factor for IBR but not BVD or salmonella)
- increased herd size (increased offs of BVDV and BHV1 presence and for L.hardjo presence - no sheep or goats)
- purchase of animals: increases odds of BHV1, L.hardjo presence and BVDV presence
- purchasing advice (from vet) lowers risk of L.harjo presence and MAP presence.
- NO EFFECT: veterinary practice, contact with adjacent animals or disinfection procedures (visitors/vehicles) nor case v.s intervention on pathogen presence
What are problems with uptake of vet advice?
- knowledge and engagement (dz status not known, accepting losses, interest by farmer and vet)
- the important vs. the urgent
- attitudes and priorities (not the most important economic loss on the farm, habit: trading at markets vs. knowing negative herd status)
What happens when disease is on a farm?
- paradigm shift: focus no longer on keeping disease out anymore
- focus more on reducing within herd spread (in most cases vaccination doesn’t prevent spread of disease)
Risk factors for disease spread on farm?
- stocking density/ airspace
- dirty cows
- transport
- wildlife
- herd size
- production groups
- calf management
- water troughs
- other species
- very disease depending