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Spatial clustering of TB-infected cattle herds prior to and following proactive badger removal
Author(s)
Date Issued
2011-08
Date Available
2013-04-24T15:33:46Z
Abstract
Bovine tuberculosis (TB) is primarily a disease of cattle. In both Ireland and the UK, badgers (Meles meles) are an important wildlife reservoir of infection. This paper examined the hypothesis that TB is spatially correlated in cattle herds, established the range of correlation and the effect, if any, of proactive badger removal on this. We also re-analysed data from the Four Area Project in Ireland, a large-scale intervention study aimed at assessing the effect of proactive badger culling on bovine TB incidence in cattle herds, taking possible spatial correlation into account. We established that infected herds are spatially correlated (the scale of spatial correlation is presented), but at a scale that varies with time and in different areas. Spatial correlation persists following proactive badger removal.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Journal
Epidemiology & Infection
Volume
139
Issue
8
Start Page
1220
End Page
1229
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Name
cattle_paper_2011.pdf
Size
408.86 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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