№ lp_1_2_40602
File format: docx
Character count: 101851
File size: 141 KB
Year:
N/A
Region / city:
Worldwide
Topic:
Bovine viral diarrhoea (BVD)
Document type:
Scientific article
Author:
N/A
Target audience:
Veterinarians, researchers, agricultural professionals
Period of validity:
N/A
Approval date:
N/A
Date of changes:
N/A
Contextual description:
A scientific article on the distribution, symptoms, diagnosis, and vaccination of bovine viral diarrhoea (BVD), including its impact on cattle health and veterinary management practices.
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Year:
2024
Region / city:
West Midlands
Topic:
Cancer treatment-induced diarrhoea management
Document Type:
Guideline
Organization / Institution:
West Midlands Cancer Alliance
Authors:
Nicky Adams, Dr V Kunene, Dr C Mikropoulos
Target Audience:
Healthcare professionals
Period of validity:
2024-2026
Approval Date:
16/09/2024
Revision Date:
30/09/2024
Review Date:
30/09/2026
Version:
4.0
Guideline purpose:
Assessment and management of systemic anti-cancer therapy (SACT) induced diarrhoea
Key Amendments:
Updated management guidance, updated antibiotic use, and self-management tips included
Scope:
Prevention and management of diarrhoea in adult patients receiving SACT including immunotherapy
Background:
High risk of diarrhoea (up to 80%) with certain chemotherapy agents
Patient care aim:
Minimise morbidity and reduce mortality risk related to SACT-induced diarrhoea
Objective:
Improve patient quality of life and ensure effective management of diarrhoea
Year:
2012
Survey name:
LQAS Household Survey
Topic:
Maternal and child health, diarrhoea case management
Document type:
Household survey questionnaire
Organizations:
UNICEF; Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine (LSTM)
Geographic level:
District, county, sub-county, village
Target respondents:
Mothers of children aged 0–59 months who had diarrhoea in the previous two weeks
Methodology:
Lot Quality Assurance Sampling (LQAS)
Sections:
Mother’s background; Child’s background; Diarrhoea case management
Data collection method:
Structured interviewer-administered questionnaire
Interview duration:
Approximately 20 minutes
Confidentiality condition:
Participation voluntary and responses kept confidential
Health focus:
Treatment practices, feeding and drinking during diarrhoea, use of ORS and zinc, care-seeking behaviour
Year:
2023
Region / City:
Wales
Theme:
Animal health, Bovine Viral Diarrhoea eradication
Document Type:
Consultation response form
Organization:
Welsh Government
Author:
Welsh Government
Target Audience:
Cattle keepers, industry representatives, farmers
Period of Action:
Not specified
Approval Date:
Not specified
Date of Changes:
Not specified
Year:
N/A
Region / city:
N/A
Subject:
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) Risk Assessment
Document type:
Draft guidelines
Organization / institution:
OIE
Author:
N/A
Target audience:
OIE Member Countries
Period of validity:
N/A
Approval date:
N/A
Date of amendments:
N/A
Note:
Year
Authors:
Miriam Casey-Bryars; Jamie A. Tratalos; Andrew Byrne; Simon More; Damien Barrett; Jamie M. Madden; Andrew Conlan
Affiliations:
School of Veterinary Medicine, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland; Centre for Veterinary Epidemiology and Risk Analysis, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland; Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Dublin, Ireland; Disease Dynamics Unit, Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
Correspondence:
Miriam Casey-Bryars ([email protected]
Note:
), School of Veterinary Medicine, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin D04 W6F6, Ireland
Country:
Ireland
Subject:
Bovine tuberculosis; cattle herds; epidemiology; risk factors; residency time; herd management
Document type:
Supplementary results; descriptive summary figures
Time period covered:
2005–2024 (figures vary by analysis)
Population:
Irish cattle herds
Data scope:
Ante-mortem and slaughterhouse bTB cases; herd size; residency time; neighbourhood burden; test types; herd management categories
Year:
2021
Region:
European Union
Subject:
Animal Health / Germinal Products
Document Type:
Guidance / Regulatory Instruction
Issuing Authority:
Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA)
Applicable Regulations:
Regulation (EU) 2016/429, Delegated Regulation (EU) 2020/686, Council Directive 88/407/EEC, Council Directive 93/60/EEC, Directive 89/556/EEC
Target Audience:
Approved veterinarians and personnel handling bovine germinal products
Effective Date:
20 April 2021
Document Reference:
BOV-GP-STORAGE-INTRA Certificate and TRACES NT system
Products Covered:
Semen, oocytes, embryos of bovine animals
Storage Centres:
EU approved Bovine Germinal Product Storage Centres
Year:
2026
Region / City:
United Kingdom
Subject:
Export of meat products
Document Type:
Guidance Notes
Issuing Body:
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra)
Target Audience:
Official Veterinarians, Exporters
Effective Period:
Ongoing
Approval Date:
2026
Last Updated:
N/A
Date:
6 October 2022
Application number:
A1253
Document type:
Supporting document – Risk, benefit and technical assessment
Issuing body:
Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ)
Applicant:
Synlait Milk Ltd.
Subject:
Voluntary addition of bovine lactoferrin to infant formula products
Regulatory framework:
Australia New Zealand Food Standards Code
Proposed maximum level:
40 mg/100 kJ (approximately 1 g/L)
Products covered:
Infant formula, follow-on formula, infant formula for special dietary use
Assessment areas:
Food technology, toxicology, microbiology, dietary intake, nutrition, beneficial health effects
Ingredient assessed:
Bovine lactoferrin derived from cow’s milk
Allergen consideration:
Potential relevance to cow’s milk allergy
Referenced standards:
Proposed inclusion in Schedule 3 of the Code
Target population:
Infants, including preterm and very low birth weight infants
Geographical scope:
Australia and New Zealand
Year:
2023
Region:
Global
Subject:
Veterinary infectious diseases
Document type:
Scientific report
Organization:
World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE)
Authors:
International Committee on Animal Health Standards
Target audience:
Veterinary professionals, researchers, livestock farmers
Pathogen:
Campylobacter fetus subsp. venerealis and subsp. fetus
Transmission:
Natural mating, artificial insemination
Clinical signs:
Infertility, early embryonic death, abortion
Diagnostic methods:
Culture, immunofluorescence, ELISA, PCR, whole genome sequencing
Vaccine information:
Commercial and autologous vaccines available, limited evidence of efficacy
Laboratory precautions:
Biosafety and containment required for manipulations
Data sources:
Field sampling from bulls, cows, and aborted fetuses
Endemic regions:
Areas with reported bovine infertility and abortion outbreaks
Document type of source:
Veterinary disease guideline
Year:
2022
Region / Country:
United Kingdom
Topic:
Veterinary Medicine, Dairy Cattle Disease
Document Type:
Research Article
Institution:
University of Liverpool, Quality Milk Management Services, Appithorne
Authors:
Hayley E Crosby-Durrani, Stuart D Carter, Richard J Blundell, Al Manning, Roger Blowey, Nicholas J Evans
Target Audience:
Veterinary professionals, dairy farmers, animal health researchers
Study Period:
Early lactation, first-lactation dairy cows
Date of Submission:
Not specified
Ethical Approval:
University of Liverpool, reference VREC460
Keywords:
bovine, dairy, histology, ischaemia, necrosis, teat
Year:
2016
Region:
United Kingdom
Topic:
Veterinary public health, livestock disease
Document type:
Academic research paper
Institution:
CTC Kingshurst Academy
Author:
Lois Franklin
Supervisor:
Scott Williams
Exam session:
May 2016
Word count:
3,652
Data sources:
Survey of 39 British cattle farmers, government BTB statistics, scientific literature
Target audience:
Academic evaluators, veterinary and agricultural researchers
Control measures discussed:
Officially TB Free (OTF) status, testing schedules, culling of infected cattle, movement restrictions
Affected regions:
South West England, South Wales, East Scotland, East Anglia, North West England
Disease focus:
Bovine Tuberculosis (BTB)
Economic impact:
Costs of slaughtered cattle, restrictions on sales, potential financial unviability of farms
Social impact:
Emotional stress, frustration, fear, and social well-being of farmers and families
Subject:
Bovine genital campylobacteriosis
Disease:
Bovine genital campylobacteriosis
Causative agent:
Campylobacter fetus subsp. venerealis
Related subspecies:
Campylobacter fetus subsp. fetus; Campylobacter fetus subsp. testudinum
Animal species:
Cattle
Transmission:
Venereal transmission during natural mating and artificial insemination with infected semen
Clinical manifestations:
Infertility, early embryonic death, abortion
Reservoir:
Bulls
Diagnostic methods:
Culture, immunofluorescent antibody test (IFAT), monoclonal antibody capture ELISA, polymerase chain reaction, whole genome sequencing
Serological testing:
Antibody ELISA for herd immunity evaluation
Sample sources:
Preputial smegma, vaginal mucus, organs of aborted fetuses
Document type:
Veterinary disease reference chapter
Section:
Diagnostic techniques and taxonomy
Field:
Veterinary microbiology and animal health
Year:
2023
Region / City:
International
Topic:
Animal health and veterinary standards
Document type:
Guidelines / Reference document
Organization:
World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE)
Author:
B. Terrestrial Code content team
Target audience:
Veterinary authorities, researchers, animal health professionals
Coverage period:
Ongoing, as updated by OIE
Scope:
Definitions and classification of cattle-related diseases and infections
Related species:
Apidae, Aves, Bovidae Bovinae, Equidae, Leporidae, Caprinae, Suidae
Status:
Work in progress, with chapters under development according to scientific knowledge and World Assembly priorities
Form number:
AH-TB-200
Revision date:
08/2017
Jurisdiction:
Wisconsin, United States
Issuing authority:
Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection – Division of Animal Health
Mailing address:
Lockbox 93178, Milwaukee, WI 53293-0178
Contact phone:
(608) 224-4872
Contact fax:
(608) 224-4871
Legal basis:
Section ATCP 10.14, Wisconsin Administrative Code; Tuberculosis Uniform Methods and Rules
Document type:
Application form
Subject:
Accreditation of tuberculosis-free herd status for bovine or bison
Applicable species:
Bovine, Bison
Certification period:
Two years
Application fee:
$100 nonrefundable fee for two-year certification
Testing requirement for initial status:
Two consecutive official tuberculosis tests conducted 9–15 months apart with negative results
Testing requirement for continued status:
Negative tuberculosis test within 21–27 months of the herd anniversary date
Required attachments:
Copy of whole herd tuberculosis test results
Applicant information fields:
Legal entity or herd owner, business name, contact person, phone number, mailing address
Herd information fields:
Herd location, county, livestock premises code, species on premises
Veterinary information fields:
Herd veterinarian name, veterinary clinic name, clinic address, phone numbers
Certification statement:
Applicant confirms that provided information is true, correct, and complete and agrees to comply with Tuberculosis Uniform Methods and Rules
Privacy notice:
Personal information may be used for purposes permitted under sec. 15.04 (1)(m), Wisconsin Statutes
Year:
2018
Region:
Hidalgo State, Mexico
Subject:
Veterinary infectious diseases
Document Type:
Research article
Institution:
Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Disciplinarias en Microbiología Animal; Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Authors:
García-López Xitli, Jaramillo-Meza Laura, Quiroz-Romero Héctor, Arriaga-Díaz Camila, Martínez-Maya J. Juan, Diosdado-Vargas Fernando, Díaz-Otero Fernando
Target Audience:
Veterinary researchers, epidemiologists
Keywords:
Bovine tuberculosis, fascioliasis, coinfection, immunodiagnosis
Study Period:
Field sampling prior to Nov 20, 2018
Received:
Nov 20, 2018
Accepted:
Dec 09, 2018
Published:
Dec 14, 2018
Volume:
1
Issue:
4
Pages:
41-54
Tables:
4
Figures:
1
License:
Creative Commons Attribution License
Conflict of Interests:
None declared
Corresponding Author:
Fernando Díaz-Otero, Centro Nacional de Investigación Disciplinaria en Microbiología Animal, Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Forestales, Agrícolas y Pecuarias, [email protected]
Year:
2025
Region / City:
United Kingdom
Subject:
Viral Hepatitis Management
Document Type:
Clinical Guideline
Author:
Lucy Garvey, Sanjay Bhagani, Ranjababu Kulasegaram, Michael Butler, Emma Hathorn, Paul Randal, Sarah Smith, Ryan White, Rachel Halford, Alison Grant, Giovanni Villa, Subathira Dakshina, Sema Mandal, Dan Bradshaw
Target Audience:
Healthcare professionals in sexual health and infectious diseases
Period of Validity:
2025
Approval Date:
July 21, 2025
Version:
1.2
Version Date:
July 21, 2025
Year:
2025
Region / City:
Massachusetts
Topic:
Healthcare Personnel, Respiratory Viral Infections
Document Type:
Guidance
Agency / Institution:
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Executive Office of Health and Human Services, Department of Public Health
Author:
N/A
Target Audience:
Healthcare Personnel
Effective Date:
September 1, 2025
Date of Approval:
N/A
Date of Amendments:
May 3, 2024