The vice-chair of Manitoba Pork Council says effective biosecurity protocols remain the best defense against Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome.
Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome or PRRS is a viral disease that causes reproductive problems in sows and it has a respiratory component in which pigs are susceptible to respiratory disease.
Last month representatives of Manitoba Pork Council traveled to Mankato, Minnesota to discuss U.S. efforts to contain and eventually eradicate PRRS.
Manitoba Pork Council vice-chair Rick Bergmann says, while PRRS presents less of a challenge in western Canada than in other regions, biosecurity remains the best defense.
Some herds are negative. some herds are positive for PRRS.
The biosecurity protocols to reduce or eliminate the challenge of PRRS is a strong disinfectant program, a strong program in regards to people and traffic on the farm yards and so on.
The farms in Manitoba here and I’m sure in western Canada, a lot of them if not all of them, have a protocol of a shower in shower out procedure.
By showering in and removing all footwear and clothing on one of the entrance and then showering into the livestock facility, that’s a great way to keep PRRS at bay.
A lot of farms will have a boundary around the building, around the structure where there’s a four foot or eight foot rock base around the building to keep the high grass from growing.
All these little steps, when you put them together, would create a good biosecurity program to keep things in place.
Bergmann notes PRRS can travel in numerous different ways so eradication will require a concerted effort on the part of most if not all stake holders.
Source: Farmscape.Ca