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One Health approach to controlling a Q fever outbreak on an Australian goat farm

journal contribution
posted on 2016-04-01, 00:00 authored by K A Bond, G Vincent, C R Wilks, L Franklin, B Sutton, J Stenos, Raquel CowanRaquel Cowan, K Lim, Eugene AthanEugene Athan, O Harris, L Macfarlane-Berry, Y Segal, S M Firestone
SUMMARYA recent outbreak of Q fever was linked to an intensive goat and sheep dairy farm in Victoria, Australia, 2012-2014. Seventeen employees and one family member were confirmed with Q fever over a 28-month period, including two culture-positive cases. The outbreak investigation and management involved a One Health approach with representation from human, animal, environmental and public health. Seroprevalence in non-pregnant milking goats was 15% [95% confidence interval (CI) 7–27]; active infection was confirmed by positive quantitative PCR on several animal specimens. Genotyping ofCoxiella burnetiiDNA obtained from goat and human specimens was identical by two typing methods. A number of farming practices probably contributed to the outbreak, with similar precipitating factors to the Netherlands outbreak, 2007-2012. Compared to workers in a high-efficiency particulate arrestance (HEPA) filtered factory, administrative staff in an unfiltered adjoining office and those regularly handling goats and kids had 5·49 (95% CI 1·29–23·4) and 5·65 (95% CI 1·09–29·3) times the risk of infection, respectively; suggesting factory workers were protected from windborne spread of organisms. Reduction in the incidence of human cases was achieved through an intensive human vaccination programme plus environmental and biosecurity interventions. Subsequent non-occupational acquisition of Q fever in the spouse of an employee, indicates that infection remains endemic in the goat herd, and remains a challenge to manage without source control.

History

Journal

Epidemiology and Infection

Volume

144

Issue

6

Pagination

1129 - 1141

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS

Location

England

ISSN

0950-2688

eISSN

1469-4409

Language

English

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Cambridge University Press