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DOI10.1186/s12917-019-1815-y
A spatial assessment of Nipah virus transmission in Thailand pig farms using multi-criteria decision analysis
Thanapongtharm, Weerapong1; Paul, Mathilde C.2; Wiratsudakul, Anuwat3; Wongphruksasoong, Vilaiporn1; Kalpravidh, Wantanee4; Wongsathapornchai, Kachen4; Damrongwatanapokin, Sudarat5; Schar, Daniel5,6; Gilbert, Marius6,7
发表日期2019
ISSN1746-6148
卷号15
英文摘要

BackgroundThailand's Central Plain is identified as a contact zone between pigs and flying foxes, representing a potential zoonotic risk. Nipah virus (NiV) has been reported in flying foxes in Thailand, but it has never been found in pigs or humans. An assessment of the suitability of NiV transmission at the spatial and farm level would be useful for disease surveillance and prevention. Multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA), a knowledge-driven model, was used to map contact zones between local epizootic risk factors as well as to quantify the suitability of NiV transmission at the pixel and farm level.ResultsSpatial risk factors of NiV transmission in pigs were identified by experts as being of three types, including i) natural host factors (bat preferred areas and distance to the nearest bat colony), ii) intermediate host factors (pig population density), and iii) environmental factors (distance to the nearest forest, distance to the nearest orchard, distance to the nearest water body, and human population density). The resulting high suitable areas were concentrated around the bat colonies in three provinces in the East of Thailand, including Chacheongsao, Chonburi, and Nakhonnayok. The suitability of NiV transmission in pig farms in the study area was quantified as ranging from very low to medium suitability.ConclusionsWe believe that risk-based surveillance in the identified priority areas may increase the chances of finding out NiV and other bat-borne pathogens and thereby optimize the allocation of financial resources for disease surveillance. In the long run, improvements of biosecurity in those priority areas may also contribute to preventing the spread of potential emergence of NiV and other bat-borne pathogens.


WOS研究方向Veterinary Sciences
来源期刊BMC VETERINARY RESEARCH
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/94733
作者单位1.DLD, Bangkok, Thailand;
2.Univ Toulouse, UMR IHAP 1225, INRA, ENVT, Toulouse, France;
3.Mahidol Univ, Fac Vet Sci, Dept Clin Sci & Publ Hlth, Salaya, Nakhon Pathom, Thailand;
4.UN, Food & Agr Org, Reg Off Asia & Pacific, Bangkok, Thailand;
5.USAID Reg Dev Miss Asia, Bangkok, Thailand;
6.Univ Brussels, Spatial Epidemiol Lab SpELL, Brussels, Belgium;
7.Univ Brussels, FNRS, Brussels, Belgium
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Thanapongtharm, Weerapong,Paul, Mathilde C.,Wiratsudakul, Anuwat,et al. A spatial assessment of Nipah virus transmission in Thailand pig farms using multi-criteria decision analysis[J],2019,15.
APA Thanapongtharm, Weerapong.,Paul, Mathilde C..,Wiratsudakul, Anuwat.,Wongphruksasoong, Vilaiporn.,Kalpravidh, Wantanee.,...&Gilbert, Marius.(2019).A spatial assessment of Nipah virus transmission in Thailand pig farms using multi-criteria decision analysis.BMC VETERINARY RESEARCH,15.
MLA Thanapongtharm, Weerapong,et al."A spatial assessment of Nipah virus transmission in Thailand pig farms using multi-criteria decision analysis".BMC VETERINARY RESEARCH 15(2019).
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