Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5793554 Preventive Veterinary Medicine 2014 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We outline bovine Johne's disease control activities in 6 infected countries to aid comparison of international practice.•Activities in Australia, Canada, Denmark, the Netherlands, United Kingdom and United States of America were reviewed.•The factual accuracy of each review was validated by individuals involved in the respective programmes.•Control activity design varied in areas including goals, herd classification, control measures and testing requirements.•Detailed, individual reviews from each country are available as supplementary documents online.

Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP) is endemic in the bovine populations of many countries and can cause a significant reduction in animal welfare and production efficiency making control desirable. Effective control has proved very difficult to achieve despite multiple regionally coordinated programmes being in existence since the 1920s. The international community increasingly recognises the value in learning from the collective experiences of existing programmes to improve the effectiveness of control. The aim of this review is to outline key aspects of bovine Johne's disease control activities across 6 endemically infected countries to facilitate comparison of current international practice. The background, control activities and monitoring components of programmes in Australia, Canada, Denmark, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States of America were individually reviewed. Factual accuracy of each review was checked by individuals involved in the respective programmes before the reviews were condensed and combined into a single document presented here, with the complete reviews of each programme available as supplementary material. There was considerable heterogeneity in key aspects of control activity design including goals, responses to declining participation, herd classification, recommended control measures and associated test requirements. The data presented will be of interest to organisations that are involved in developing new or existing regionally coordinated BJD control activities.

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