Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8985019 | Preventive Veterinary Medicine | 2005 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
The surveillance scheme based on visual inspection of lesions on carcasses at slaughter was optimal given the current prevalence of the disease in the Netherlands if the objective was to minimise the expected costs. However, the efficient set also included two other schemes: slaughterhouse inspection in combination with GAMMA-interferon testing of blood samples and slaughterhouse inspection in combination with two-stage tuberculin testing. The choice ultimately will depend on the risk attitude of the decision-maker; a more-stringent surveillance scheme will be enforced if the expected outbreak size is to be constrained. In future scenarios, ELISA testing of bulk-tank milk in combination with the current slaughterhouse inspection procedure would outperform the surveillance scheme of solely slaughterhouse inspection if ELISA testing of bulk-tank milk becomes feasible.
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Authors
M.A.P.M. van Asseldonk, H.J.W. van Roermund, E.A.J. Fischer, M.C.M. de Jong, R.B.M. Huirne,