The cost–benefit of biosecurity measures on infectious diseases in the Egyptian household poultry
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Date
Authors
Fasina, Folorunso Oludayo
Ali, A.M.
Yilma, J.M.
Thieme, O.
Ankers, P.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Increased animal intensification presents with increasing risks of animal diseases. The Egyptian
household poultry is peculiar in its management style and housing and this present
with particular challenges of risk of infection to both the flock and humans. Biosecurity
remains one of the most important means of reducing risks of infection in the household
poultry, however not much information is available to support its feasibility at the household
level of production. In this study financial feasibilities of biosecurity were modeled and
evaluated based on certain production parameters. Risks of particular importance to the
household poultry were categorized and highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 was the
most risky disease while people-related risk was the most important risk category. It was
observed that basic biosecurity measures were applicable in the household poultry and it
would be 8.45 times better to implement biosecurity than to do nothing against HPAI H5N1;
4.88 times better against Newcastle disease and 1.49 times better against coccidiosis. Sensitivity
analyses proved that the household poultry project was robust and would withstand
various uncertainties. An uptake pathway for basic biosecurity was suggested. The outcome
of this work should support decisions to implement biosecurity at the household sector of
poultry production.
Description
Keywords
Egypt, Biosecurity, Financial, Technical, Feasibility, Household poultry, Profitability
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Fasina, FO, Ali, AM, Yilma, JM, Thieme, O & Ankers, P, The cost–benefit of biosecurity measures on infectious diseases in the Egyptian household poultry, Preventive Veterinary Medicine, vol. 103, no. 2-3, pp. 178-191, (2012), doi:10.1016/j.prevetmed.2011.09.016.