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Foot and Mouth Analysis. Mike Delorme Rachelle Miron. Outline. Foot and Mouth Information Discussion of Models analysis Summary Questions. Disease History. Lots of information Disease that infects bovids (cows, pigs, goats, sheep...) Humans are very rarely affected
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Foot and Mouth Analysis Mike Delorme Rachelle Miron
Outline • Foot and Mouth Information • Discussion of Models • analysis • Summary • Questions
Disease History • Lots of information • Disease that infects bovids (cows, pigs, goats, sheep...) • Humans are very rarely affected • It can be spread through the air or through contact • There are vaccinations available • Canada does not allow vaccination
http://www.csiro.au/images/mediaReleases/FMDtrottersmall.jpg http://www.mass.gov/agr/animalhealth/diseases/foot_mouth/pages/fmd_01.htm
2001 UK Outbreak • The 2001 Pre Budget Report estimated the direct economic impact of FMD at £2 billion - representing 0.2% of GDP. Tourism and related industries alone lost between £4.5 billion and £5.4 billion • The 2001 outbreak took 221 days to eradicate, 1 day less than the outbreak of 1967-1968 • By the end of the outbreak on September 30 2001, 6,094,139 animals had been killed - around two million for welfare reasons, and around four million for disease control purposes www.politics.co.uk Statistic 1: (Source: Treasury, Pre Budget Report 2001 (CM53182)); Statistics 2 and 3: (Source: DEFRA, 2004)
Spread Altered from http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/1190000/images/_1193260_foot_mouth_25_03.gif
http://www.daffa.gov.au/animal-plant-health/animal/modelling/fmdhttp://www.daffa.gov.au/animal-plant-health/animal/modelling/fmd
Building a Simple Model • Worked with a SIR model • Continuous time
Susceptible • Born susceptible • Can become infected • Can die naturally
Infected • Enter from S • Can die naturally • Can die from disease • Can recover
Recovered • Can die naturally • Can lose their immunity • Become susceptible again
Model 1 - Analysis • Set Infected=0 to get disease free equilibrium • DFE • Set up Jacobian and evaluate at DFE • Arino Method • Examines infected cows in the system • Gives R0 value for model • Find I* • Plot S,I,R vs. time
Model 1 - Analysis • Values for parameters
Model 3 - Vaccine • Can vaccinate cows so they never get the disease • Low numbers of susceptible cows at equilibrium can represent cows leaving the system due to vaccination
Model 3 - Analysis • What will happen when different proportions of cattle are vaccinated?
Model 3 - Analysis • Very few Susceptible cows left • Where have they gone?
Model 4 – Vaccine++ • How many cows are vaccinated? • Set up a “Perfect” class that keeps track of immunized cows • How many cows need to be vaccinated to have no infected cows at equilibrium? • Herd Immunity
Perfect Cows (P) • Created by • vaccinating newborn cows • vaccinating cows after they recover from the disease • Leave due to natural death www.uoguelph.ca
Model 4 - Equations Note: Same R0 as in Model 3 Same parameter values as in Model 3
Model 5 – Keep track of dead • Improvement on Model 4 • Now cows that die as a result of the disease are tracked • Z for Zombie
Model 5 - Equations Note: Same DFE and R0 as in Model 4 Same parameter values as in Model 3