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Epidemiology and Infection logoLink to Epidemiology and Infection
. 2001 Aug;127(1):157–167. doi: 10.1017/s0950268801005738

Persistence patterns of scrapie in a sheep flock.

T J Hagenaars 1, N M Ferguson 1, C A Donnelly 1, R M Anderson 1
PMCID: PMC2869722  PMID: 11561968

Abstract

The epidemiology and transmission dynamics of sheep scrapie is as yet poorly understood. Here we present a theoretical analysis of the transmission dynamics within a sheep flock, concentrating on how persistence properties depend on transmission scenario and flock size. Patterns of disease persistence and extinction are studied analytically using branching-process approximations and numerically using stochastic model simulations. For a given basic reproduction number, disease extinction is most likely when late-stage infected animals are responsible for most of the transmission. This effect can be understood in terms of aggregation in the distribution of the number of secondary infections arising from a single primary infection. The presence of an environmental reservoir reduces the probability of extinction.

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