1 / 12

PED Producer Update

PED Producer Update. Paul Sundberg DVM, PhD, Dipl ACVPM VP Science and Technology National Pork Board. National Pork Board Organization. Biosecurity Working Group Biocontainment Working Group Packer Biosecurity Working Group. PED Strategic Task Force NPPC AASV NPB USDA VDL SAHO

cole
Télécharger la présentation

PED Producer Update

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PED Producer Update Paul Sundberg DVM, PhD, Dipl ACVPM VP Science and Technology National Pork Board

  2. National Pork Board Organization • Biosecurity Working Group • Biocontainment Working Group • Packer Biosecurity Working Group • PED Strategic Task Force • NPPC • AASV • NPB • USDA • VDL • SAHO • Producers • Practicing vets

  3. The role of harvest plant lairage and transportation in propagating the initial stages of an outbreak of Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea Virus in the United States in 2013. James F. Lowe, DVM, MS Diplomate ABVP (Food Animal) Lowe Consulting Ltd. Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, University of Illinois

  4. What we learned • Trailers can become contaminated at packing plants but less than one clean trailer is contaminated for each contaminated trailer that arrives a the plant. • There is contact by EVERY driver with the plant lairageand that appears to be sufficient to allow for PEDV movement between trailers. • More contact between trailer and plant is associated with higher rates of PEDV spread

  5. Illinois Rapid Response Team - Risks • Air – low • Spread by humans – moderate • Vehicles or other equipment – moderate • Pig movements – negligible • Water – ‘not likely’ • Feed pellets – moderate • Bedding materials – low

  6. Ohio Rapid Response Team - Risks • Spread by workers – low • Vehicles or other equipment – low • AI or veterinary supplies – negligible • Pig movements – low • Feed ingredients / commercial meal mix – ‘not likely’ • Feed pellets – high • Water, air, shavings – negligible

  7. Feed Risk – What Do We Know? • PED is not a human health or food safety issue. • The disease is impacting farms of a variety of sizes and production types and needs to be prevented through a variety of biosecurity procedures. • PCR is an important tool to use in assessing contact with the virus • There are multiple methods of PED transmission including environmental, transportation, feed systems and other vectors.

  8. Feed Risk – What Do We Know? • Within processing feed ingredients and feed processing there is a time x temperature that should be effective in inactivating the virus • Post processing contamination can occur in different segments of the feed supply chain • Pork industry stakeholders, veterinarians, producers, nutritionists and feed processors, agreed to a disciplined research approach to attack PED

  9. Current Status of PEDV

  10. Current Status of PEDV

  11. Newly Identified Swine Viruses • Porcine Circovirus Type 2b (China) • PED • Porcine Kubovirus • Porcine Deltacoronavirus

  12. NPPC 2014 Forum Resolution • A listing of non-reportable swine diseases not in the United States • Responsibilities of the government, industry organizations, producers and the pork chain in surveillance and response • Coordinated strategies to respond to and contain or manage disease • Strategies for the efficient sharing of information deemed necessary containment / control • Strategies to strengthen the defense of the US pork industry

More Related