Evaluation of foot and mouth disease control measures: Simulating two endemic areas of Thailand

Publication date

2023-11

Authors

Chanchaidechachai, Thanicha
Saatkamp, Helmut W.
Hogeveen, HISNI 0000000116692142
de Jong, Mart C.M.
Fischer, E. A JORCID 0000-0002-0599-701XISNI 0000000388292468

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Foot and mouth disease (FMD) is an important livestock disease in Thailand, with outbreaks occurring every year. However, the effects of FMD control measures in Thailand have received little research attention. Epidemiological models have been widely used to evaluate FMD outbreak control, but such a model has never been developed for Thailand. We constructed a stochastic between-farm transmission model to evaluate FMD control measures. The epidemiological unit of the model was the farm, which could be in different states: susceptible, latent, undetected infectious, detected infectious and recovered. The between-farm transmission was calculated by the sum of distance-dependent transmission and trade network transmission using parameters derived from FMD outbreaks in 2016–2017. We used this model to simulate the outbreaks with and without the implementation of the following control measures: culling all animals on infected farms, ring vaccination, animal movement restrictions and isolation of infected farms. The control measures were evaluated by estimating the number of secondarily infected farms and the outbreak duration for each scenario. The model was simulated in two study areas located in the Lamphaya Klang subdistrict (high farm density) and the Bo Phloi district (low farm density). The effects of control measures differed between the two study areas. When farm density was high, rigid control measures were required to prevent a major outbreak. Among all options, culling the animals on infected farms resulted in the lowest number of infected farms and the shortest outbreak duration. In contrast, for an area with a low farm density, less stringent control measures were sufficient to control the usually minor outbreaks. The results indicate that different areas require a different approach to control an outbreak of FMD.

Keywords

Animal movement restrictions, Culling, Disease modelling, Disease outbreak, Endemic, Foot and mouth disease, Isolation, Ring vaccination, Spatial transmission kernel, Food Animals, Animal Science and Zoology, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Chanchaidechachai, T, Saatkamp, H W, Hogeveen, H, de Jong, M C M & Fischer, E A J 2023, 'Evaluation of foot and mouth disease control measures : Simulating two endemic areas of Thailand', Preventive Veterinary Medicine, vol. 220, 106045. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.prevetmed.2023.106045