Map expands airport prevention actions to prevent the entry of African swine fever in Brazil

Published 2021년 8월 24일

Tridge summary

Brazilian ministry leaders are taking preventive measures against the arrival of African swine fever (ASF) on the American continent, following the disease's confirmation in the Dominican Republic. Measures include inspections of passengers from high-risk countries like the Dominican Republic and Haiti, with support from various agencies and a task force at Guarulhos International Airport. These efforts are part of the Ministry's strategy since 2018 to strengthen Mexico, Cuba, and the Dominican Republic. The Ministry is also discussing the expansion of diagnostic capabilities for ASF to other laboratories in the Network of Federal Agricultural Defense Laboratories (LFDA Network), with the LFDA-MG serving as the official diagnosis lab for the Ministry. These actions aim to protect Brazil's swine industry from the highly contagious and deadly disease.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Leaders of the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Supply (Mapa) followed, on the night of Monday (23) and early this Tuesday (24), at the Guarulhos International Airport (SP), with control actions to prevent the entry of swine fever African in Brazil. Cumbica airport, as it is known, concentrates 76% of international passenger traffic in the country. African swine fever (APS) is a fatal viral disease for swine, which affects both domestic swine and wild pigs, which live freely in the wild. It does not affect humans, but it can cause losses due to mortality and the costs of contingency in cases of outbreaks and blocking exports of porcine meat products. Brazilian health authorities are on alert after PSA cases were confirmed in the Dominican Republic in July, prompting the arrival of the disease on the American continent. This is the first record of the disease on the continent since the 1980s, when it was considered eradicated. At a meeting, the executive secretary of the ...
Source: Agricultura

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