According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (PDF), various factors influence the management of foreign animal disease, including increased international travel, evolving infectious agents, trade agreements, and the uncertain impact of biotechnology.
The guidelines help veterinarians apply biosecurity measures, safeguard their clinics, answer common client questions, maintain continuity of business, and access additional information during an outbreak.
For example, the AABP-AVC guidelines suggest a 72-hour movement standstill following the first U.S. diagnosis of a foreign animal disease. In the early stages of an outbreak, extra caution is needed by everyone visiting businesses with livestock, especially veterinarians performing farm calls.
Allocation of resources during an outbreak will likely prioritize the infected premises, and practices that are not within a disease control area will need to maintain essential veterinary services while also mitigating potential disease spread.
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