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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Pathogens and parasites, species unlike others: The spatial distribution of avian influenzas in poultry

Artois, Jean 25 January 2019 (has links) (PDF)
What explains the geographic distribution of pathogens? Better understanding and characterising disease patterns will help scientists to identify areas likely to host future epidemics and epizootics and to prioritise surveillance and intervention. However, the use of disease surveillance data to assess the risk of transmission and generate risk maps raises conceptual and methodological issues. Indeed, pathogens and more particularly viruses aren't ”species” like others that live in the open environment and must be studied with methods and concepts of their own. Avian influenza (AI), a disease caused by a virus infecting bird populations, has been selected to study these issues. AI has a major economic impact on the poultry industry in many countries, raises concerns of livelihood in low and middle-income countries, and represents a major concern for human health. The aim of this PhD thesis was to improve the knowledge on the spatial epidemiology of AI in different settings and conditions (i). For this, recent epizootics caused by the subtypes A (H5N1) and A (H7N9) were selected as case studies. First, highly pathogenic subtypes of the A (H5N1) virus have been studied in poultry farms (ducks and chickens) at different spatial scales: at the continental scale and the regional scale in the Mekong (Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand) and the Nile Delta in Egypt. All these cases occurred between 2003, the date on which the virus starts to spread outside China, and 2015; the HPAI A (H5N1) subtypes are still reported today in many countries. Human infections caused by the A (H7N9) virus in China from March 2013 to 2017 were also studied. Studied different AI subtypes at different spatial scales within different host species also allowed to develop a conceptual model of AI transmission and to discuss the issue of the transferability of results in epidemiology (ii). Lastly, this PhD thesis leads to a discussion about the transfer of methods and concepts from ecology to spatial epidemiology, with a particular emphasis on their possible limitations (iii). / Doctorat en Sciences agronomiques et ingénierie biologique / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished

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