Epidemiological implications of the contact network structure for cattle farms and the 20–80 rule

2. Zero hunger Cattle Diseases/epidemiology Cattle Diseases/transmission Disease Transmission, Infectious/veterinary Reproduction Communicable Diseases/veterinary Cattle Diseases Communicable Diseases/epidemiology Agriculture Transportation 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences Communicable Diseases 0403 veterinary science Risk Factors Space-Time Clustering Communicable Diseases/transmission Disease Transmission, Infectious Animals Cattle Disease Transmission, Infectious/prevention & control Reproduction/physiology
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2005.0331 Publication Date: 2005-06-28T19:43:23Z
ABSTRACT
The network of movements of cattle between farm holdings is an important determinant of the potential rates and patterns of spread of infectious diseases. Because cattle movements are uni-directional, the network is unusual in that the risks of acquiring infection (by importing cattle) and of passing infection on (by exporting cattle) can be clearly distinguished, and there turns out to be no statistically significant correlation between the two. This means that the high observed degree of heterogeneity in numbers of contacts does not result in an increase in the basic reproduction number,R0, in contrast to findings from studies of other contact networks. Despite this, it is still the case that just 20% of holdings contribute at least 80% of the value ofR0.
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