Participation of feed industry personnel and pig farms to reduce risk of disease spread between farms

Biosecurity protocols reduce the introduction and spread of pathogens among swine farms. For pigs, biosecurity ensures market stability, maintains export opportunities, and controls spread of production and public health diseases. Salmonella, the second most common cause of bacterial foodborne illne...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bottoms, K., Dewey, Catherine E., Richardson, K., Poljak, Z., Carter, N.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/63508
_version_ 1855542937961627648
author Bottoms, K.
Dewey, Catherine E.
Richardson, K.
Poljak, Z.
Carter, N.
author_browse Bottoms, K.
Carter, N.
Dewey, Catherine E.
Poljak, Z.
Richardson, K.
author_facet Bottoms, K.
Dewey, Catherine E.
Richardson, K.
Poljak, Z.
Carter, N.
author_sort Bottoms, K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Biosecurity protocols reduce the introduction and spread of pathogens among swine farms. For pigs, biosecurity ensures market stability, maintains export opportunities, and controls spread of production and public health diseases. Salmonella, the second most common cause of bacterial foodborne illness, causes gastrointestinal illness. Pigs can be asymptomatic carriers of the bacteria and pork products are a known source of salmonellosis in humans. Salmonella have been isolated from pigs, boots, flies, rodents, bird feces, feed, feed-ingredients, and feed trucks. Objective: to identify management factors to reduce the risk of disease spread among swine farms through feed trucks. Methods: Focus groups and key informant interviews were conducted with managers, dispatchers and drivers of feed companies and swine producers. Participants rated the factors for economic and logistical feasibility and likelihood of reducing disease spread. Highly rated factors were used in a field trial. In total, 40 drivers from 3 companies, delivering feed to 2202 farms over 6 weeks (in the winter) collected descriptive data on the factors and compared use of different boots. Farm factors (prevalence) were: keeping areas (driveway, feed bin and barnyard) clean of mud and manure (82%), and dead-stock (91%); having an outbuilding to deliver bagged feed (24%); providing farm boots and coveralls for the driver; ordering the correct amount of feed; and notifying feed mill of a disease outbreak. Feed truck driver factors included wearing new clean, disinfected, dried boots (25%) and gloves (50%) at each farm; remaining outside the barn (92%); washing the steering wheel (49%), floor mat (77%) and outside of the truck (32%) every 24 hours; following farm protocols; and leaving feed bill outside barn (54%). Drivers given disinfected rubber boots were more likely to wear these on farms (42%) than plastic disposable boots (4%) (P<0.05). Biosecurity is a responsibility that is shared among all members of the industry. Feed personnel were encouraged to know more about disease transmission.
format Conference Paper
id CGSpace63508
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
publishDateSort 2014
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace635082024-03-06T10:16:43Z Participation of feed industry personnel and pig farms to reduce risk of disease spread between farms Bottoms, K. Dewey, Catherine E. Richardson, K. Poljak, Z. Carter, N. animal feeding animal diseases Biosecurity protocols reduce the introduction and spread of pathogens among swine farms. For pigs, biosecurity ensures market stability, maintains export opportunities, and controls spread of production and public health diseases. Salmonella, the second most common cause of bacterial foodborne illness, causes gastrointestinal illness. Pigs can be asymptomatic carriers of the bacteria and pork products are a known source of salmonellosis in humans. Salmonella have been isolated from pigs, boots, flies, rodents, bird feces, feed, feed-ingredients, and feed trucks. Objective: to identify management factors to reduce the risk of disease spread among swine farms through feed trucks. Methods: Focus groups and key informant interviews were conducted with managers, dispatchers and drivers of feed companies and swine producers. Participants rated the factors for economic and logistical feasibility and likelihood of reducing disease spread. Highly rated factors were used in a field trial. In total, 40 drivers from 3 companies, delivering feed to 2202 farms over 6 weeks (in the winter) collected descriptive data on the factors and compared use of different boots. Farm factors (prevalence) were: keeping areas (driveway, feed bin and barnyard) clean of mud and manure (82%), and dead-stock (91%); having an outbuilding to deliver bagged feed (24%); providing farm boots and coveralls for the driver; ordering the correct amount of feed; and notifying feed mill of a disease outbreak. Feed truck driver factors included wearing new clean, disinfected, dried boots (25%) and gloves (50%) at each farm; remaining outside the barn (92%); washing the steering wheel (49%), floor mat (77%) and outside of the truck (32%) every 24 hours; following farm protocols; and leaving feed bill outside barn (54%). Drivers given disinfected rubber boots were more likely to wear these on farms (42%) than plastic disposable boots (4%) (P<0.05). Biosecurity is a responsibility that is shared among all members of the industry. Feed personnel were encouraged to know more about disease transmission. 2014-05-04 2015-03-29T15:37:47Z 2015-03-29T15:37:47Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/63508 en Limited Access Bottoms, K., Dewey, C., Richardson, K., Poljak, Z. and Carter, N. 2014. Participation of feed industry personnel and pig farms to reduce risk of disease spread between farms. Abstract in proceedings of the 2014 Global Development Symposium, Guelph, Ontario, Canada, 4-7 May 2014.
spellingShingle animal feeding
animal diseases
Bottoms, K.
Dewey, Catherine E.
Richardson, K.
Poljak, Z.
Carter, N.
Participation of feed industry personnel and pig farms to reduce risk of disease spread between farms
title Participation of feed industry personnel and pig farms to reduce risk of disease spread between farms
title_full Participation of feed industry personnel and pig farms to reduce risk of disease spread between farms
title_fullStr Participation of feed industry personnel and pig farms to reduce risk of disease spread between farms
title_full_unstemmed Participation of feed industry personnel and pig farms to reduce risk of disease spread between farms
title_short Participation of feed industry personnel and pig farms to reduce risk of disease spread between farms
title_sort participation of feed industry personnel and pig farms to reduce risk of disease spread between farms
topic animal feeding
animal diseases
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/63508
work_keys_str_mv AT bottomsk participationoffeedindustrypersonnelandpigfarmstoreduceriskofdiseasespreadbetweenfarms
AT deweycatherinee participationoffeedindustrypersonnelandpigfarmstoreduceriskofdiseasespreadbetweenfarms
AT richardsonk participationoffeedindustrypersonnelandpigfarmstoreduceriskofdiseasespreadbetweenfarms
AT poljakz participationoffeedindustrypersonnelandpigfarmstoreduceriskofdiseasespreadbetweenfarms
AT cartern participationoffeedindustrypersonnelandpigfarmstoreduceriskofdiseasespreadbetweenfarms