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PRRS eradication from swine farms in five regions of Hungary

István Szabó, Lajos Bognár, Tamás Molnár, Imre Nemes, Ádám Bálint

2020Acta Veterinaria Hungarica16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) causes significant losses to the swine industry worldwide, which leads to launching eradication programmes. The PRRS eradication programme in Hungary is based on the territorial principle, and it is obligatory for each swine farm irrespective of the number of animals kept there. Hungary has an exceptionally large herd size in large-scale pig farms. Large fattening farms operate as all-in/all-out or continuous flow systems. The large-scale breeding herds are predominantly farrow-to-finish types. In large-scale breeding farms, PRRS eradication was carried out by the depopulation-repopulation method in 33 farms, of which 23 received state compensation, 18 farm units either finished production or changed to producing fatteners only. Two farms used the test and removal method for eradication. One farm was classified as 'vaccinated free'. At this farm the breeding animals are vaccinated continuously but there is no vaccination of the progeny at any age, and the PRRS-free status of the farm is strictly controlled and monitored. By 31 December 2019, all pigs in five euroregions of Hungary had become free from PRRS virus, while the PRRS eradication process is still ongoing in the remaining two regions.

Topics & Concepts

HerdVeterinary medicineBiologyPig farmingAnimal productionPig breedingAgricultural scienceBiotechnologyAnimal scienceMedicineAnimal Virus Infections StudiesViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyVirus-based gene therapy research
PRRS eradication from swine farms in five regions of Hungary | Litcius