J Vet Sci.  2024 Jan;25(1):e13. 10.4142/jvs.23185.

Exploring preventive factors against insufficient antibody positivity rate for foot-and-mouth disease in pig farms in South Korea: a preliminary ecological study

Affiliations
  • 1Animal and Plant Quarantine Agency, Pyeongtaek District Office, Pyeongtaek 17962, Korea
  • 2Graduate of Veterinary Biosecurity and Protection, Chungbuk National University, Cheongju 28644, Korea
  • 3College of Veterinary Medicine, Chungbuk National University, Cheongju 28644, Korea

Abstract

Background
Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is a highly contagious viral disease in livestock that has tremendous economic impact nationally. After multiple FMD outbreaks, the South Korean government implemented a vaccination policy for efficient disease control. However, during active surveillance by quarantine authorities, pig farms have reported an insufficient antibody positivity rate to FMD.
Objective
In this study, the spatial and temporal trends of insufficiency among pig farms were analyzed, and the effect of the number of government veterinary officers was explored as a potential preventive factor.
Methods
Various data were acquired, including national-level surveillance data for antibody insufficiency from the Korea Animal Health Integrated System, the number of veterinary officers, and the number of local pig farms. Temporal and geographical descriptive analyses were conducted to overview spatial and temporal trends. Additionally, logistic regression models were employed to investigate the association between the number of officers per pig farm with antibody insufficiency. Spatial cluster analysis was conducted to detect spatial clusters.
Results
The results showed that the incidence of insufficiency tended to decrease in recent years (odds ratio [OR], 0.803; 95% confidence interval [95% CIs], 0.721–0.893), and regions with a higher density of governmental veterinary officers (OR, 0.942; 95% CIs, 0.918–0.965) were associated with a lower incidence.
Conclusions
This study implies that previously conducted national interventions would be effective, and the quality of government-provided veterinary care could play an important role in addressing the insufficient positivity rate of antibodies.

Keyword

Foot-and-mouth disease; insufficient positivity rate of antibodies; cluster analysis; temporal trend
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