1 / 16

How the 2004 Avian Influenza Outbreak on the Delmarva Peninsula Was Controlled

How the 2004 Avian Influenza Outbreak on the Delmarva Peninsula Was Controlled. Dr. Nathaniel L. Tablante Associate Prof. and Extension Poultry Veterinarian University of Maryland College Park. History of Delmarva Outbreaks. 2/05/04 (1 st outbreak)

enya
Télécharger la présentation

How the 2004 Avian Influenza Outbreak on the Delmarva Peninsula Was Controlled

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. Howthe 2004 Avian InfluenzaOutbreak on the Delmarva Peninsula Was Controlled Dr. Nathaniel L. Tablante Associate Prof. and Extension Poultry Veterinarian University of Maryland College Park

  2. History of Delmarva Outbreaks • 2/05/04 (1st outbreak) • 2-house, 12,000 bird independent poultry farm in Farmington, DE • 2/08/04 (2nd outbreak) • 73,800 commercial roaster farm 7 miles south of 1st outbreak • 3/04/04 (3rd outbreak) • 134,400 six-week old broilers in Pocomoke, MD

  3. How did we control AI?

  4. Preparation • Learned from 2002 H7N2 outbreak in Virginia • Delmarva Poultry Industry, Inc. (DPI) Emergency Poultry Disease Task Force (EPDTF) and state departments of agriculture updated their emergency poultry disease guidelines and procedures • Re-affirmed MOU

  5. Quick Response • EPDTF was mobilized as soon as AI was confirmed on a poultry farm near Farmington, Delaware on February 5, 2004 • EPDTF promptly implemented a preset eradication and control plan

  6. Team Work and Cooperation • Poultry industry (lead role) • Diagnostic Labs (MDA Salisbury, UDel Lasher Lab) • MDA, DDA, VDA, WVDA, USDA • Cooperative Extension (MD, DE) • Allied industries • MD, DE, and VA State police

  7. Major Activities • Quarantine • Depopulation • In-house composting • Increased biosecurity • Surveillance • Rapid diagnosis (RRT-PCR)

  8. Quarantine

  9. Depopulation

  10. In-house composting

  11. Increased Biosecurity

  12. Surveillance

  13. Rapid Diagnosis (RRT-PCR)

  14. The Role of Cooperative Extension (ALERT) in an Emergency Disease Outbreak • Educate, don’t regulate • Provide accurate and timely information • Fact sheets (paper and online) • Phone calls • Emails • Media inquiries (Newspapers, TV, Radio) • Cooperate, don’t dictate • Be a team player

  15. Final Thoughts • AI virus: • does not care about politics • does not recognize state lines • will spread if given the slightest opportunity • The best weapon against AI or any emergency disease is BIOSECURITY!

More Related