Animal Disease Epidemics: Implications for Production, Policy and Trade
- 1 September 2002
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Outlook on Agriculture
- Vol. 31 (3), 151-160
- https://doi.org/10.5367/000000002101294001
Abstract
The outbreak of a highly infectious animal disease in a disease-free area is an ever-present risk. Recent epidemics in European livestock populations illustrate that the cost in terms of eradication, lost production and trade disruption may be high. In this paper, the implications for the meat and livestock industry, government policy and international trade rules are considered. The need for strict biosecurity and effective contingency plans is stressed. Options such as private insurance, animal tracing systems and emergency vaccination are discussed. Current measures for controlling animal disease epidemics raise various social and ethical issues that complicate the policy makers' task.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- FMD in the UK—the 2001 outbreak; what if...?Vaccine, 2001
- Tracing systems used during the epidemic of classical swine fever in the Netherlands, 1997-1998.Revue Scientifique et Technique de l'OIE, 2001
- Managing foot-and-mouthNature, 2001
- Spatial and stochastic simulation to compare two emergency-vaccination strategies with a marker vaccine in the 1997/1998 Dutch Classical Swine Fever epidemicPreventive Veterinary Medicine, 2001
- The effectiveness of routine serological surveillance: case study of the 1997 epidemic of classical swine fever in the NetherlandsRevue Scientifique et Technique de l'OIE, 1999
- The economic evaluation of control and eradication of epidemic livestock diseases.Revue Scientifique et Technique de l'OIE, 1999
- Irreversible decision making in contagious animal disease control under uncertainty: an illustration using FMD in BrittanyEuropean Review of Agricultural Economics, 1999