Table 3.
Group | No. of persons | Carrier proportion (%) | No. of carriers assuming all herds positive | No. of carriers assuming 69% positive herdsa |
---|---|---|---|---|
Swine farmer/employee, full time | 8,000b | 74c | 5,920 | 4,085 |
Farm employee, weekly work with swine | 1,000d | 74e | 740 | 511 |
Swine veterinarians and advisors with daily contact to swine | 200 | 74e | 148 | 148 |
Craftsmen with weekly contact or less to swine | 7,564d | 11f | 821 | 566 |
Swine transport workers | 453d | 22g | 100 | 100 |
Abattoir workers | 6,600d | 4h | 264 | 264 |
Household members to all persons listed above | 26,199b | 6i | 1,511 | 1,073 |
Remaining society | 5,600,000 | 0.10j | 5,607 | 3,980 |
Sum of carriers | 0.27 | 15,111 | 10,615 |
aResult of a screening in 2014.
bData from Danish Statistics, combined with best guesses among the authors validated through contact to experts.
cUnpublished data from ongoing Danish study into 10 swine herds infected with MRSA CC398. Here, 74% of the employees were positive and 10% of the household members.
dEstimates from the Danish swine industry.
eAs a worst case assumption, it was assumed that weekly work with swine would result in the same carrier rate as daily work with swine, and that swine vets would have the same carrier rate as persons with daily contact to swine.
fFor craftsmen with weekly contact or less, it was assumed that 74% would be positive when they leave the farm, but that they will be negative the day after—hence 74%/7 = 11%.
gBased on Van Cleef et al. (62).
hBased on a weighted average of the prevalence observed in abattoir employees presented in Ref. (59, 62, 63).
iAuthors’ best guess based among others on unpublished data described in b. An average household has 2.1 members according to data from Danish Statistics—in the present case 1.1 persons apart from the person with contact to swine.
jAuthors’ best guess.
MRSA, methicillin-resistant S. aureus.