Veterinarians’ perception of livestock infectious disease: results from a five country cross-European survey (2024)
Alistair Antonopoulos, Sharon Sweeney, Kelly McCall, Edgar Garcia Manzanilla, Carla Correia-Gomes, Alison Burrell, Erika Chenais, Lena-Mari Tamminen, László Ózsvári, Johannes Charlier, Stelian Bărăităreanu, Jeroen Dewulf, Evelien Biebaut, Áine Regan

TL;DR
This study explores how veterinarians in five European countries perceive the risk of various livestock infectious diseases, revealing significant variation in risk perception and awareness gaps.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into regional differences in veterinarians’ perceptions of livestock disease risks and highlights critical awareness gaps.
Findings
Transboundary diseases like African swine fever and avian influenza are perceived as high risk across countries.
Endemic diseases are often viewed as higher risk than transboundary diseases in specific countries.
Awareness gaps exist for zoonotic diseases such as Hepatitis E and Salmonella Dublin.
Abstract
Livestock production accounts for nearly half of all agricultural output globally, but the long-term sustainability of the sector is threatened by a range of infectious diseases. Endemic diseases lead to a wide range of production losses and animal welfare issues, while transboundary and epidemic diseases can lead to widespread deaths, the implementation of stringent control measures, and a disruption of trade. Zoonotic diseases further threaten human health. It is therefore critical that livestock diseases are effectively controlled. When implementing disease control strategies and biosecurity measures, it is important to understand stakeholders’ views, particularly regarding which diseases should be prioritised. The current study aims to develop our understanding of veterinarians’ views regarding infectious diseases in livestock across Belgium, Ireland, Hungary, Romania, and Sweden…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Disease Management and Epidemiology · Vector-Borne Animal Diseases · Zoonotic diseases and public health
