Effectiveness of On-Farm Biosecurity Measures Studied

The Australian equine influenza outbreak provided a unique opportunity to evaluate some biosecurity measures.
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Prior to August 2007, there had been no reported cases of equine influenza in Australia; the 2007 equine influenza outbreak that ravaged New South Wales (NSW) resulted in a four-month epidemic, infecting approximately 70,000 horses before eradication was achieved.

"The 2007 epidemic of equine influenza in Australia provided an opportunity to investigate the effectiveness of on-farm biosecurity measures in preventing the spread of a novel pathogen in a largely naive population," a research team from the University of Sydney explained. In 2011 the team released their study findings about on-farm biosecurity measures that Australian animal health authorities had advised horse owners to follow to reduce the epidemic’s spread. Recommended measures included hand washing, changing clothing and shoes, disinfecting equipment, utilizing footbaths, isolating horses showing clinical signs, halting horse movement, restricting access between horses over fences of adjacent properties, and isolating infected horses’ waste.

Horse owners and managers from 200 horse properties in highly affected areas of NSW participated in this case-control study, which sampled data from the first seven weeks of the epidemic. Interviews conducted with horse owners and farm managers revealed each facility’s compliance with recommended biosecurity measures and other risk factors for spread onto a property at the time of the outbreak.

 “The results of our analysis suggest that compliance with certain on-farm biosecurity practices prevented horses on premises in high-risk areas from being infected,” noted Simon Firestone, BVSc, BSc, PGDipEpi, MAppEpi, a PhD candidate at the University of Sydney

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Freelance journalist Natalie DeFee Mendik is a multiple American Horse Publications editorial and graphics awards winner specializing in equestrian media. She holds an MA in English from Colorado State University and an International Federation of Journalists’ International press card, and is a member of the International Alliance of Equestrian Journalists. With over three decades of horse experience, Natalie’s main equine interests are dressage and vaulting. Having lived and ridden in England, Switzerland, and various parts of the United States, Natalie currently resides in Colorado with her husband and two girls.

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