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Risk Factors for Changing Test Classification in the Danish Surveillance Program for Salmonella in Dairy Herds

A surveillance program in which all cattle herds in Denmark are classified into Salmonella infection categories has been in place since 2002. Dairy herds were considered test negative and thus most likely free of infection if Salmonella antibody measurements were consistently low in bulk tank milk s...

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Published in:Journal of dairy science 2007-06, Vol.90 (6), p.2815-2825
Main Authors: Nielsen, L.R., Warnick, L.D., Greiner, M.
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Warnick, L.D.
Greiner, M.
description A surveillance program in which all cattle herds in Denmark are classified into Salmonella infection categories has been in place since 2002. Dairy herds were considered test negative and thus most likely free of infection if Salmonella antibody measurements were consistently low in bulk tank milk samples collected every 3 mo. Herds were considered test positive and thus most likely infected if the 4-quarter moving average bulk tank milk antibody concentration was high or if there was a large increase in the most recent measurement compared with the average value from the previous 3 samples. The objective of this study was to evaluate risk factors for changing from test negative to positive, which was indicative of herds becoming infected from one quarter of the year to the next, and risk factors for changing from test positive to negative, which was indicative of herds recovering from infection between 2 consecutive quarters of the year. The Salmonella serotypes in question were Salmonella Dublin or other serotypes that cross-react with the Salmonella Dublin antigen in the ELISA (e.g., some Salmonella Typhimurium types). Two logistic regression models that accounted for repeated measurements at the herd level and controlled for herd size and regional effects were used. Data from 2003 was used for the analyses. A change from test negative to positive occurred in 2.0% of the quarterly observations (n=21,007) from test negative dairy herds. A change from test positive to negative occurred in 10.0% of quarterly observations (n=6,168) available from test positive dairy herds. The higher the number of test-positive neighbor herds in the previous year-quarter, the more likely herds were to become test positive for Salmonella. The number of purchased cattle from test-positive herds was also associated with changing from test negative to positive. The bigger the herd, the more likely it was to change from negative to test positive. The effect of herd size on recovery was less clear. Large herds consisting mainly of large breeds or having test-positive neighbors in a 2-km radius were less likely to change from test positive to negative, whereas the breed and neighbor factors were not found to be important for small herds. Organic production was associated with remaining test positive, but not with becoming test positive. The results emphasize the importance of external and internal biosecurity measures to control Salmonella infections.
doi_str_mv 10.3168/jds.2006-314
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Dairy herds were considered test negative and thus most likely free of infection if Salmonella antibody measurements were consistently low in bulk tank milk samples collected every 3 mo. Herds were considered test positive and thus most likely infected if the 4-quarter moving average bulk tank milk antibody concentration was high or if there was a large increase in the most recent measurement compared with the average value from the previous 3 samples. The objective of this study was to evaluate risk factors for changing from test negative to positive, which was indicative of herds becoming infected from one quarter of the year to the next, and risk factors for changing from test positive to negative, which was indicative of herds recovering from infection between 2 consecutive quarters of the year. The Salmonella serotypes in question were Salmonella Dublin or other serotypes that cross-react with the Salmonella Dublin antigen in the ELISA (e.g., some Salmonella Typhimurium types). Two logistic regression models that accounted for repeated measurements at the herd level and controlled for herd size and regional effects were used. Data from 2003 was used for the analyses. A change from test negative to positive occurred in 2.0% of the quarterly observations (n=21,007) from test negative dairy herds. A change from test positive to negative occurred in 10.0% of quarterly observations (n=6,168) available from test positive dairy herds. The higher the number of test-positive neighbor herds in the previous year-quarter, the more likely herds were to become test positive for Salmonella. The number of purchased cattle from test-positive herds was also associated with changing from test negative to positive. The bigger the herd, the more likely it was to change from negative to test positive. The effect of herd size on recovery was less clear. Large herds consisting mainly of large breeds or having test-positive neighbors in a 2-km radius were less likely to change from test positive to negative, whereas the breed and neighbor factors were not found to be important for small herds. Organic production was associated with remaining test positive, but not with becoming test positive. 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Psychology ; herd health ; Logistic Models ; Milk - immunology ; milk analysis ; milk composition ; milk quality ; Population Density ; Predictive Value of Tests ; regression analysis ; Reproducibility of Results ; risk factor ; Risk Factors ; Salmonella ; Salmonella dublin ; Salmonella enterica - classification ; Salmonella enterica - immunology ; Salmonella enterica - pathogenicity ; Salmonella Infections, Animal - epidemiology ; Salmonella Infections, Animal - transmission ; Salmonella typhimurium ; salmonellosis ; Sensitivity and Specificity ; Sentinel Surveillance - veterinary ; Serotyping ; surveillance program dairy cattle ; Terrestrial animal productions ; Vertebrates</subject><ispartof>Journal of dairy science, 2007-06, Vol.90 (6), p.2815-2825</ispartof><rights>2007 American Dairy Science Association</rights><rights>2007 INIST-CNRS</rights><rights>Copyright American Dairy Science Association Jun 2007</rights><lds50>peer_reviewed</lds50><oa>free_for_read</oa><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed><citedby>FETCH-LOGICAL-c517t-1d264518d0c1a6c9c93d708edae3da5027c83a3d21f61f132c8c4161c1d912963</citedby><cites>FETCH-LOGICAL-c517t-1d264518d0c1a6c9c93d708edae3da5027c83a3d21f61f132c8c4161c1d912963</cites></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><linktohtml>$$Uhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022030207700930$$EHTML$$P50$$Gelsevier$$Hfree_for_read</linktohtml><link.rule.ids>314,780,784,3549,27924,27925,45780</link.rule.ids><backlink>$$Uhttp://pascal-francis.inist.fr/vibad/index.php?action=getRecordDetail&amp;idt=18788065$$DView record in Pascal Francis$$Hfree_for_read</backlink><backlink>$$Uhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17517722$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed$$Hfree_for_read</backlink></links><search><creatorcontrib>Nielsen, L.R.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Warnick, L.D.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Greiner, M.</creatorcontrib><title>Risk Factors for Changing Test Classification in the Danish Surveillance Program for Salmonella in Dairy Herds</title><title>Journal of dairy science</title><addtitle>J Dairy Sci</addtitle><description>A surveillance program in which all cattle herds in Denmark are classified into Salmonella infection categories has been in place since 2002. Dairy herds were considered test negative and thus most likely free of infection if Salmonella antibody measurements were consistently low in bulk tank milk samples collected every 3 mo. Herds were considered test positive and thus most likely infected if the 4-quarter moving average bulk tank milk antibody concentration was high or if there was a large increase in the most recent measurement compared with the average value from the previous 3 samples. The objective of this study was to evaluate risk factors for changing from test negative to positive, which was indicative of herds becoming infected from one quarter of the year to the next, and risk factors for changing from test positive to negative, which was indicative of herds recovering from infection between 2 consecutive quarters of the year. The Salmonella serotypes in question were Salmonella Dublin or other serotypes that cross-react with the Salmonella Dublin antigen in the ELISA (e.g., some Salmonella Typhimurium types). Two logistic regression models that accounted for repeated measurements at the herd level and controlled for herd size and regional effects were used. Data from 2003 was used for the analyses. A change from test negative to positive occurred in 2.0% of the quarterly observations (n=21,007) from test negative dairy herds. A change from test positive to negative occurred in 10.0% of quarterly observations (n=6,168) available from test positive dairy herds. The higher the number of test-positive neighbor herds in the previous year-quarter, the more likely herds were to become test positive for Salmonella. The number of purchased cattle from test-positive herds was also associated with changing from test negative to positive. The bigger the herd, the more likely it was to change from negative to test positive. The effect of herd size on recovery was less clear. Large herds consisting mainly of large breeds or having test-positive neighbors in a 2-km radius were less likely to change from test positive to negative, whereas the breed and neighbor factors were not found to be important for small herds. Organic production was associated with remaining test positive, but not with becoming test positive. 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Dairy herds were considered test negative and thus most likely free of infection if Salmonella antibody measurements were consistently low in bulk tank milk samples collected every 3 mo. Herds were considered test positive and thus most likely infected if the 4-quarter moving average bulk tank milk antibody concentration was high or if there was a large increase in the most recent measurement compared with the average value from the previous 3 samples. The objective of this study was to evaluate risk factors for changing from test negative to positive, which was indicative of herds becoming infected from one quarter of the year to the next, and risk factors for changing from test positive to negative, which was indicative of herds recovering from infection between 2 consecutive quarters of the year. The Salmonella serotypes in question were Salmonella Dublin or other serotypes that cross-react with the Salmonella Dublin antigen in the ELISA (e.g., some Salmonella Typhimurium types). Two logistic regression models that accounted for repeated measurements at the herd level and controlled for herd size and regional effects were used. Data from 2003 was used for the analyses. A change from test negative to positive occurred in 2.0% of the quarterly observations (n=21,007) from test negative dairy herds. A change from test positive to negative occurred in 10.0% of quarterly observations (n=6,168) available from test positive dairy herds. The higher the number of test-positive neighbor herds in the previous year-quarter, the more likely herds were to become test positive for Salmonella. The number of purchased cattle from test-positive herds was also associated with changing from test negative to positive. The bigger the herd, the more likely it was to change from negative to test positive. The effect of herd size on recovery was less clear. Large herds consisting mainly of large breeds or having test-positive neighbors in a 2-km radius were less likely to change from test positive to negative, whereas the breed and neighbor factors were not found to be important for small herds. Organic production was associated with remaining test positive, but not with becoming test positive. The results emphasize the importance of external and internal biosecurity measures to control Salmonella infections.</abstract><cop>Savoy, IL</cop><pub>Elsevier Inc</pub><pmid>17517722</pmid><doi>10.3168/jds.2006-314</doi><tpages>11</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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source ScienceDirect; Free E-Journal (出版社公開部分のみ)
subjects Animal productions
Animals
Antibodies, Bacterial - analysis
antibody detection
Antigens, Bacterial - analysis
Antigens, Bacterial - immunology
Biological and medical sciences
bulk milk
Cattle
cattle diseases
Cattle Diseases - epidemiology
Cattle Diseases - transmission
classification
Cross Reactions
dairy herds
Dairying - methods
Denmark - epidemiology
disease surveillance
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay - methods
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay - veterinary
Female
Food industries
Food microbiology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
herd health
Logistic Models
Milk - immunology
milk analysis
milk composition
milk quality
Population Density
Predictive Value of Tests
regression analysis
Reproducibility of Results
risk factor
Risk Factors
Salmonella
Salmonella dublin
Salmonella enterica - classification
Salmonella enterica - immunology
Salmonella enterica - pathogenicity
Salmonella Infections, Animal - epidemiology
Salmonella Infections, Animal - transmission
Salmonella typhimurium
salmonellosis
Sensitivity and Specificity
Sentinel Surveillance - veterinary
Serotyping
surveillance program dairy cattle
Terrestrial animal productions
Vertebrates
title Risk Factors for Changing Test Classification in the Danish Surveillance Program for Salmonella in Dairy Herds
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