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The animal-human interface and infectious disease in industrial food animal production: Rethinking biosecurity and biocontainment

Graham, J P; Leibler, J H; Price, L B; Otte, J M; Pfeiffer, D U; Tiensin, T; Silbergeld, E K

Authors

J P Graham

J H Leibler

L B Price

J M Otte

D U Pfeiffer

T Tiensin

E K Silbergeld



Abstract

Understanding interactions between animals and humans is critical in preventing outbreaks of zoonotic disease. This is particularly important for avian influenza. Food animal production has been transformed since the 1918 influenza pandemic. Poultry and swine production have changed from small-scale methods to industrial-scale operations. There is substantial evidence of pathogen movement between and among these industrial facilities, release to the external environment, and exposure to farm workers, which challenges the assumption that modern poultry production is more biosecure and biocontained as compared with backyard or small holder operations in preventing introduction and release of pathogens. An analysis of data from the Thai government investigation in 2004 indicates that the odds of H5N1 outbreaks and infections were significantly higher in large-scale commercial poultry operations as compared with backyard flocks. These data suggest that successful strategies to prevent or mitigate the emergence of pandemic avian influenza must consider risk factors specific to modern industrialized food animal production.

Citation

Graham, J. P., Leibler, J. H., Price, L. B., Otte, J. M., Pfeiffer, D. U., Tiensin, T., & Silbergeld, E. K. The animal-human interface and infectious disease in industrial food animal production: Rethinking biosecurity and biocontainment. Public Health Reports, 123(3), 282-299

Journal Article Type Article
Deposit Date Nov 11, 2014
Journal Public Health Reports
Print ISSN 0033-3549
Publisher Association of Schools of Public Health
Volume 123
Issue 3
Pages 282-299
Public URL https://rvc-repository.worktribe.com/output/1429524
Additional Information Corporate Creators : FAO - Italy, John Hopkins Bloomberg Sch, Utrecht University