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Identifying Age Cohorts Responsible for Peste Des Petits Ruminants Virus Transmission among Sheep, Goats, and Cattle in Northern Tanzania.

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dc.creator Herzog, Catherine
dc.creator de Glanville, William
dc.creator Willett, Brian
dc.creator Cattadori, Isabella
dc.creator Kapur, Vivek
dc.creator Hudson, Peter
dc.creator Swai, Emmanuel
dc.creator Cleaveland, Sarah
dc.creator Bjørnstad, Ottar
dc.creator Buza, Joram
dc.date 2020-06-12T08:04:13Z
dc.date 2020-06-12T08:04:13Z
dc.date 2020-02-07
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T09:20:32Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T09:20:32Z
dc.identifier https://doi.org/10.3390/v12020186
dc.identifier https://dspace.nm-aist.ac.tz/handle/20.500.12479/789
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/95023
dc.description This research article published by MDPI, 2020
dc.description Peste des petits ruminants virus (PPRV) causes a contagious disease of high morbidity and mortality in global sheep and goat populations. To better control this disease and inform eradication strategies, an improved understanding of how PPRV transmission risk varies by age is needed. Our study used a piece-wise catalytic model to estimate the age-specific force of infection (FOI, per capita infection rate of susceptible hosts) among sheep, goats, and cattle from a cross-sectional serosurvey dataset collected in 2016 in Tanzania. Apparent seroprevalence increased with age, reaching 53.6%, 46.8%, and 11.6% (true seroprevalence: 52.7%, 52.8%, 39.2%) for sheep, goats, and cattle, respectively. Seroprevalence was significantly higher among pastoral animals than agropastoral animals across all ages, with pastoral sheep and goat seroprevalence approaching 70% and 80%, respectively, suggesting pastoral endemicity. The best fitting piece-wise catalytic models merged age groups: two for sheep, three for goats, and four for cattle. The signal of these age heterogeneities were weak, except for a significant FOI peak among 2.5-3.5-year-old pastoral cattle. The subtle age-specific heterogeneities identified in this study suggest that targeting control efforts by age may not be as effective as targeting by other risk factors, such as production system type. Further research should investigate how specific husbandry practices affect PPRV transmission.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher MDPI
dc.subject Epidemiology
dc.subject Catalytic model
dc.subject Force of infection
dc.subject Peste-des-petits-ruminants
dc.subject Seroepidemiologic studies
dc.title Identifying Age Cohorts Responsible for Peste Des Petits Ruminants Virus Transmission among Sheep, Goats, and Cattle in Northern Tanzania.
dc.type Article


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