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. 2001 Dec 15;149(24):729-43.

Descriptive epidemiology of the 2001 foot-and-mouth disease epidemic in Great Britain: the first five months

Affiliations
  • PMID: 11808655

Descriptive epidemiology of the 2001 foot-and-mouth disease epidemic in Great Britain: the first five months

J C Gibbens et al. Vet Rec. .

Abstract

In February 2001, foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) was confirmed in Great Britain. A major epidemic developed, which peaked around 50 cases a day in late March, declining to under 10 a day by May. By mid-July, 1849 cases had been detected. The main control measures employed were livestock movement restrictions and the rapid slaughter of infected and exposed livestock. The first detected case was in south-east England; infection was traced to a farm in north-east England to which all other cases were linked. The epidemic was large as a result of a combination of events, including a delay in the diagnosis of the index case, the movement of infected sheep to market before FMD was first diagnosed, and the time of year. Virus was introduced at a time when there were many sheep movements around the country and weather conditions supported survival of the virus. The consequence was multiple, effectively primary, introductions of FMD virus into major sheep-keeping areas. Subsequent local spread from these introductions accounted for the majority of cases. The largest local epidemics were in areas with dense sheep populations and livestock dealers who were active during the key period. Most affected farms kept both sheep and cattle. At the time of writing the epidemic was still ongoing; however, this paper provides a basis for scientific discussion of the first five months.

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Comment in

  • FMD control strategies.
    Michell AR. Michell AR. Vet Rec. 2001 Dec 22-29;149(25):778. Vet Rec. 2001. PMID: 11808670 No abstract available.
  • FMD in the UK up to 1967.
    Taylor K. Taylor K. Vet Rec. 2002 Jan 5;150(1):26-7. Vet Rec. 2002. PMID: 11817863 No abstract available.
  • FMD inquiries.
    Michell B. Michell B. Vet Rec. 2002 Mar 9;150(10):323. Vet Rec. 2002. PMID: 11913592 No abstract available.

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