France begins new avian influenza vaccination round

Published 2024년 8월 26일

Tridge summary

The French department of agriculture has announced a new campaign to vaccinate poultry against high pathogenic avian influenza, following a successful pilot campaign last year that saw the vaccination of 50 million ducks. The new campaign, starting on 1 October, will cost 67.75 million doses, with the government covering 70% of the costs in the first three months. The vaccines will be supplied by both Boehringer Ingelheim Animal Health and Ceva Santé Animale, after criticism from the livestock community and Ceva Santé Animale for the previous campaign's use of only Boehringer Ingelheim.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The French department of agriculture has purchased another 67.75 million doses of a vaccine against high pathogenic avian influenza. The new avian influenza vaccination campaign will begin on 1 October. The government will cover 70% of the costs during the first 3 months of the campaign, the department in Paris has announced. France began a first vaccination round of poultry against highly pathogenic avian influenza last autumn after the country had been hit by serious, large-scale outbreaks of the disease in some previous winters, particularly among ducks, which appeared to be very susceptible to avian influenza infection. Those outbreaks occurred mainly in the south-western part of the country, which is the centre of intensive duck farming for the foie gras industry. The largest avian influenza vaccination campaign Over the last few months, some 50 million ducks have been vaccinated – this, says the department, is the first campaign seen globally on such a large scale. As a ...
Source: Poultryworld

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