Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8988766 | The Veterinary Journal | 2005 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Accurate epidemiological models can become useful tools for determining relevant control policies for different scenarios and, conversely, inaccurate models may become an abuse for disease control. Inaccuracy presents two opposing difficulties. Firstly, too much control (in terms of animal slaughter for 2001) would negatively impact the farming community for many subsequent years, whilst too little control would permit an epidemic to persist. Accuracy however, presents the optimal permutation of control measures that could be implemented for a given set of conditions, and is a prerequisite to boosting public confidence in the use of epidemiological models for future epidemics.
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Authors
R.P. Kitching, A.M. Hutber, M.V. Thrusfield,