Quantitative Risk Assessment of Introducing Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy into Taiwan through Importation of Bone-in Beef from North America / 台灣牛隻因進口北美地區帶骨牛肉引入牛海綿狀腦病之量化風險評估

碩士 / 臺灣大學 / 獸醫學研究所 / 98 / The study aims to assess bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) risk of Taiwan incurred from North America (NA) bone-in beef importation which introduces risk materials including internal bone marrow as well as external spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia contamination. After importation, releasing of risk materials comes from plate waste recycling, processing factories and slaughterhouse wastewater treatment as well as rendered product input into cattle environment. A risk model is constructed to simulate BSE prevalence of NA, the estimation of product usage and distribution, and the probability of cattle oral transmission. After input the estimated values for all parameters and selection the most appropriate model, Latin Hypercube simulation for 10,000 times is conducted and the results reveal that the risk of BSE through importing NA bone-in beef is 3.08×10-11 ± 2.75×10-10 (95th percentile = 4.39×10-9) in 2010. The study provides not only a scenario of overall bone-in beef importation risk assessment for domestic cattle but also a flexible model to assess the BSE risk from other beef exporting countries. Moreover, the study introduces a new idea to extrapolate meat and bone meal contamination in animal feed via exponential distribution, takes bone marrow as the major resource of infectivity to process risk assessment, and considers the role of pigs in transmission of BSE. The results show that fertilizer is the most important routes of BSE transmission in our model. Although the simulated risk values are within negligible ranges of scientific acceptable scale, they should be interpreted carefully for the sake of uncertainties in current model. Thus, it is necessary to ascertain all the ambigulous parameters in current model and process for further simuations to adjust the risk in the future. Since BSE is an irreversible fatal zoonotic disease, it is essential to establish rigorous strategies through appropriate risk management to reduce BSE transmission risk.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TW/098NTU05541012
Date January 2010
CreatorsYi-Hsuen Hsieh, 謝易軒
Contributors周晉澄
Source SetsNational Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations in Taiwan
Languagezh-TW
Detected LanguageEnglish
Type學位論文 ; thesis
Format84

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