The burden of disease in Swiss pork production
Giulia Savioli, Dolf Kümmerlen, Beat Thomann

TL;DR
This study estimates the economic impact of disease in Swiss pork production, showing that diseases significantly reduce efficiency and profitability.
Contribution
The study introduces a new method to quantify the total disease burden using the AHLE metric for Swiss pork production.
Findings
Disease-free production would require 41% fewer sows and increase gross margins significantly.
The total disease burden in Swiss pork is valued at CHF 461 million, nearly half the production value.
Disease impacts extend to environmental and animal welfare concerns due to increased resource use.
Abstract
Disease negatively affects the health and productivity of animals, reducing the efficiency and profitability of the livestock sector. Quantifying disease burden in livestock is important to allow appropriate prioritization of diseases and resource allocation in animal health. Although previous studies have quantified costs due to single causes of disease, a consistent approach to estimating total disease costs and comparing them across a wide range of livestock species and production systems was lacking. The development of the Animal Health Loss Envelope (AHLE) metric within the Global Burden of Animals Diseases (GBADs) programme aimed to address these gaps. In this study, we estimate the impacts of improved health status on pig demographics, and estimate the burden due to all causes of disease (the AHLE) for Swiss pork production. Using data from the industry, literature and national…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Disease Management and Epidemiology · Microbial infections and disease research · Animal Virus Infections Studies
