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Factors associated with time under quarantine for swine herds in the voluntary phase of the Illinois pseudorabies eradication program
Authors:Arthur M Siegel  Ronald M Weigel  Arnold C Taft
Institution:

a Division of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Illinois, 2001 South Lincoln Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801, USA

b Bureau of Animal Health, Division of Animal Industries, Illinois Department of Agriculture, Springfield, IL 62794, USA

Abstract:The association of herd characteristics and intervention strategies with time under quarantine was evaluated for 163 farrow-to-finish swine herds enrolled in the voluntary phase (1986–1987) of the pseudorabies virus (PRV) eradication program in the state of Illinois (USA). Vaccination was the intervention strategy used most widely (69% of herds), particularly in larger herds. Depopulation was used primarily when PRV seroprevalence was high, and test-and-removal when seroprevalence was low. Approximately 50% of the herds were released from quarantine within 3 years of developing a herd clean-up plan.

Multiple regression analysis using the Cox proportional hazards model indicated the following. Vaccination had a strong association with a longer time until release from quarantine (P<0.001). This is attributed to the lack of a vaccine differential test during this time, which made diagnosis of natural infection more difficult. Offspring segragation was associated with a longer time under quarantine (all herds: P=0.05; non-vaccinated herds: P=0.004). Delay in implementation of a herd clean-up plan was also associated with longer time under quarantine (all herds: P=0.012; non-vaccinated herds: P<0.001). Herds with higher seroprevalence at the time of agreement to a herd plan required a longer time under quarantine (all herds: P<0.001). This result was apparent for non-vaccinated herds (P=0.001), and thus is not merely a consequence of vaccination. Herds in areas with a high geographic density of quarantined herds required a longer time before release from quarantine (all herds: P=0.003), although this trend was not apparent for non-vaccinated herds (P=0.39). After taking PRV seroprevalence into account, there was no apparent association of time under quarantine with sow herd size (all herds: P=0.057; non-vaccinated herds: P=0.81) or confinement housing (all herds: P=0.19; non-vaccinated herds: P=0.91).

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