Risk factors for Brucella seroprevalence in peri-urban dairy farms in five Indian cities

Brucellosis is endemic among dairy animals in India, contributing to production losses and posing a health risk to people, especially farmers and others in close contact with dairy animals or their products. Growing urban populations demand increased milk supplies, resulting in intensifying dairy production at the peri-urban fringe. Peri-urban dairying is under-studied but has implications for disease transmission, both positive and negative. In this cross-sectional study, five Indian cities were selected to represent different geographies and urbanization extent. Around each, we randomly selected 34 peri-urban villages, and in each village three smallholder dairy farms (defined as having a maximum of 10 dairy animals) were randomly selected. The farmers were interviewed, and milk samples were taken from up to three animals. These were tested using a commercial ELISA for antibodies against Brucella abortus, and factors associated with herd seroprevalence were identified. In all, 164 out of 1163 cows (14.1%, 95% CI 12.2–16.2%) were seropositive for Brucella. In total, 91 out of 510 farms (17.8%, 95% CI 14.6–21.4%) had at least one positive animal, and out of these, just seven farmers stated that they had vaccinated against brucellosis. In four cities, the farm-level seroprevalence ranged between 1.4–5.2%, while the fifth city had a seroprevalence of 72.5%. This city had larger, zero-grazing herds, used artificial insemination to a much higher degree, replaced their animals by purchasing from their neighbors, were less likely to contact a veterinarian in case of sick animals, and were also judged to be less clean. Within the high-prevalence city, farms were at higher risk of being infected if they had a young owner and if they were judged less clean. In the low-prevalence cities, no risk factors could be identified. In conclusion, this study has identified that a city can have a high burden of infected animals in the peri-urban areas, but that seroprevalence is strongly influenced by the husbandry system. Increased intensification can be associated with increased risk, and thus the practices associated with this, such as artificial insemination, are also associated with increased risk. These results may be important to identify high-risk areas for prioritizing interventions and for policy decisions influencing the structure and development of the dairy industry.

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Main Authors: Lindahl, Johanna F., Gill, J.P.S., Hazarika, R.A., Fairoze, N.M., Bedi, J.S., Dohoo, I., Chauhan, A.S., Grace, Delia, Kakkar, M.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2019-06-30
Subjects:animal diseases, zoonoses, dairying, health, animal production, cattle,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/102264
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed4020070
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1022642023-12-08T19:36:04Z Risk factors for Brucella seroprevalence in peri-urban dairy farms in five Indian cities Lindahl, Johanna F. Gill, J.P.S. Hazarika, R.A. Fairoze, N.M. Bedi, J.S. Dohoo, I. Chauhan, A.S. Grace, Delia Kakkar, M. animal diseases zoonoses dairying health animal production cattle Brucellosis is endemic among dairy animals in India, contributing to production losses and posing a health risk to people, especially farmers and others in close contact with dairy animals or their products. Growing urban populations demand increased milk supplies, resulting in intensifying dairy production at the peri-urban fringe. Peri-urban dairying is under-studied but has implications for disease transmission, both positive and negative. In this cross-sectional study, five Indian cities were selected to represent different geographies and urbanization extent. Around each, we randomly selected 34 peri-urban villages, and in each village three smallholder dairy farms (defined as having a maximum of 10 dairy animals) were randomly selected. The farmers were interviewed, and milk samples were taken from up to three animals. These were tested using a commercial ELISA for antibodies against Brucella abortus, and factors associated with herd seroprevalence were identified. In all, 164 out of 1163 cows (14.1%, 95% CI 12.2–16.2%) were seropositive for Brucella. In total, 91 out of 510 farms (17.8%, 95% CI 14.6–21.4%) had at least one positive animal, and out of these, just seven farmers stated that they had vaccinated against brucellosis. In four cities, the farm-level seroprevalence ranged between 1.4–5.2%, while the fifth city had a seroprevalence of 72.5%. This city had larger, zero-grazing herds, used artificial insemination to a much higher degree, replaced their animals by purchasing from their neighbors, were less likely to contact a veterinarian in case of sick animals, and were also judged to be less clean. Within the high-prevalence city, farms were at higher risk of being infected if they had a young owner and if they were judged less clean. In the low-prevalence cities, no risk factors could be identified. In conclusion, this study has identified that a city can have a high burden of infected animals in the peri-urban areas, but that seroprevalence is strongly influenced by the husbandry system. Increased intensification can be associated with increased risk, and thus the practices associated with this, such as artificial insemination, are also associated with increased risk. These results may be important to identify high-risk areas for prioritizing interventions and for policy decisions influencing the structure and development of the dairy industry. 2019-06-30 2019-07-23T08:44:16Z 2019-07-23T08:44:16Z Journal Article Lindahl, J.F., Gill, J.P.S., Hazarika, R.A., Fairoze, N.M., Bedi, J.S., Dohoo, I., Chauhan, A.S., Grace, D. and Kakkar, M. 2019. Risk factors for Brucella seroprevalence in peri-urban dairy farms in five Indian cities. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease 4(2): 70. 2414-6366 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/102264 https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed4020070 en CC-BY-4.0 Open Access MDPI Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic animal diseases
zoonoses
dairying
health
animal production
cattle
animal diseases
zoonoses
dairying
health
animal production
cattle
spellingShingle animal diseases
zoonoses
dairying
health
animal production
cattle
animal diseases
zoonoses
dairying
health
animal production
cattle
Lindahl, Johanna F.
Gill, J.P.S.
Hazarika, R.A.
Fairoze, N.M.
Bedi, J.S.
Dohoo, I.
Chauhan, A.S.
Grace, Delia
Kakkar, M.
Risk factors for Brucella seroprevalence in peri-urban dairy farms in five Indian cities
description Brucellosis is endemic among dairy animals in India, contributing to production losses and posing a health risk to people, especially farmers and others in close contact with dairy animals or their products. Growing urban populations demand increased milk supplies, resulting in intensifying dairy production at the peri-urban fringe. Peri-urban dairying is under-studied but has implications for disease transmission, both positive and negative. In this cross-sectional study, five Indian cities were selected to represent different geographies and urbanization extent. Around each, we randomly selected 34 peri-urban villages, and in each village three smallholder dairy farms (defined as having a maximum of 10 dairy animals) were randomly selected. The farmers were interviewed, and milk samples were taken from up to three animals. These were tested using a commercial ELISA for antibodies against Brucella abortus, and factors associated with herd seroprevalence were identified. In all, 164 out of 1163 cows (14.1%, 95% CI 12.2–16.2%) were seropositive for Brucella. In total, 91 out of 510 farms (17.8%, 95% CI 14.6–21.4%) had at least one positive animal, and out of these, just seven farmers stated that they had vaccinated against brucellosis. In four cities, the farm-level seroprevalence ranged between 1.4–5.2%, while the fifth city had a seroprevalence of 72.5%. This city had larger, zero-grazing herds, used artificial insemination to a much higher degree, replaced their animals by purchasing from their neighbors, were less likely to contact a veterinarian in case of sick animals, and were also judged to be less clean. Within the high-prevalence city, farms were at higher risk of being infected if they had a young owner and if they were judged less clean. In the low-prevalence cities, no risk factors could be identified. In conclusion, this study has identified that a city can have a high burden of infected animals in the peri-urban areas, but that seroprevalence is strongly influenced by the husbandry system. Increased intensification can be associated with increased risk, and thus the practices associated with this, such as artificial insemination, are also associated with increased risk. These results may be important to identify high-risk areas for prioritizing interventions and for policy decisions influencing the structure and development of the dairy industry.
format Journal Article
topic_facet animal diseases
zoonoses
dairying
health
animal production
cattle
author Lindahl, Johanna F.
Gill, J.P.S.
Hazarika, R.A.
Fairoze, N.M.
Bedi, J.S.
Dohoo, I.
Chauhan, A.S.
Grace, Delia
Kakkar, M.
author_facet Lindahl, Johanna F.
Gill, J.P.S.
Hazarika, R.A.
Fairoze, N.M.
Bedi, J.S.
Dohoo, I.
Chauhan, A.S.
Grace, Delia
Kakkar, M.
author_sort Lindahl, Johanna F.
title Risk factors for Brucella seroprevalence in peri-urban dairy farms in five Indian cities
title_short Risk factors for Brucella seroprevalence in peri-urban dairy farms in five Indian cities
title_full Risk factors for Brucella seroprevalence in peri-urban dairy farms in five Indian cities
title_fullStr Risk factors for Brucella seroprevalence in peri-urban dairy farms in five Indian cities
title_full_unstemmed Risk factors for Brucella seroprevalence in peri-urban dairy farms in five Indian cities
title_sort risk factors for brucella seroprevalence in peri-urban dairy farms in five indian cities
publisher MDPI
publishDate 2019-06-30
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/102264
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed4020070
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