Methods for assessing the impact of infectious diseases of livestock - their role in improving the control of Newcastle disease in Southern Africa

A framework for the impact assessment of disease control strategies for Newcastle disease (ND) is discussed. This includes linking epidemiological and economic data to predict the relative impact of different control interventions at different levels from farm to region. Epidemiological transmissio...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: McDermott, John J., Coleman, P., Randolph, Thomas F.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50844
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author McDermott, John J.
Coleman, P.
Randolph, Thomas F.
author_browse Coleman, P.
McDermott, John J.
Randolph, Thomas F.
author_facet McDermott, John J.
Coleman, P.
Randolph, Thomas F.
author_sort McDermott, John J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A framework for the impact assessment of disease control strategies for Newcastle disease (ND) is discussed. This includes linking epidemiological and economic data to predict the relative impact of different control interventions at different levels from farm to region. Epidemiological transmission models assume that village poultry are the reservoir of ND virus for other sectors. Simple models for transmission of the virus among village chickens predict that for vaccination to be effective, it must be conducted relatively frequently with a large proportion of chickens covered. Extrapolations to transmission between village and commercial sectors are suggested. Economic issues at farm level are considered most influential. Decisions to invest in national and regional projects will depend on the assessment of social equity impacts and cost-benefit and institutional analyses to assess relative benefits of private versus public sector interventions. Capturing the perspectives of all stakeholders in the ND control intervention process is considered crucial to both enhanced impact and sustainability of any control program.
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spelling CGSpace508442021-08-09T07:59:59Z Methods for assessing the impact of infectious diseases of livestock - their role in improving the control of Newcastle disease in Southern Africa McDermott, John J. Coleman, P. Randolph, Thomas F. chickens evaluation disease control disease transmission economic analysis epidemiology infectious diseases methodology newcastle disease poultry sustainability villages A framework for the impact assessment of disease control strategies for Newcastle disease (ND) is discussed. This includes linking epidemiological and economic data to predict the relative impact of different control interventions at different levels from farm to region. Epidemiological transmission models assume that village poultry are the reservoir of ND virus for other sectors. Simple models for transmission of the virus among village chickens predict that for vaccination to be effective, it must be conducted relatively frequently with a large proportion of chickens covered. Extrapolations to transmission between village and commercial sectors are suggested. Economic issues at farm level are considered most influential. Decisions to invest in national and regional projects will depend on the assessment of social equity impacts and cost-benefit and institutional analyses to assess relative benefits of private versus public sector interventions. Capturing the perspectives of all stakeholders in the ND control intervention process is considered crucial to both enhanced impact and sustainability of any control program. 2001 2014-10-31T06:21:44Z 2014-10-31T06:21:44Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50844 en Limited Access Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research
spellingShingle chickens
evaluation
disease control
disease transmission
economic analysis
epidemiology
infectious diseases
methodology
newcastle disease
poultry
sustainability
villages
McDermott, John J.
Coleman, P.
Randolph, Thomas F.
Methods for assessing the impact of infectious diseases of livestock - their role in improving the control of Newcastle disease in Southern Africa
title Methods for assessing the impact of infectious diseases of livestock - their role in improving the control of Newcastle disease in Southern Africa
title_full Methods for assessing the impact of infectious diseases of livestock - their role in improving the control of Newcastle disease in Southern Africa
title_fullStr Methods for assessing the impact of infectious diseases of livestock - their role in improving the control of Newcastle disease in Southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Methods for assessing the impact of infectious diseases of livestock - their role in improving the control of Newcastle disease in Southern Africa
title_short Methods for assessing the impact of infectious diseases of livestock - their role in improving the control of Newcastle disease in Southern Africa
title_sort methods for assessing the impact of infectious diseases of livestock their role in improving the control of newcastle disease in southern africa
topic chickens
evaluation
disease control
disease transmission
economic analysis
epidemiology
infectious diseases
methodology
newcastle disease
poultry
sustainability
villages
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50844
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