Philippines confirms African swine fever outbreak in Cebu

Published Mar 8, 2023

Tridge summary

The Philippines has seen an outbreak of African swine fever in central Cebu province, with 58 out of 149 blood samples testing positive for the disease. The country's agriculture department has deployed response teams to contain the infection, which has been confirmed in 12 out of more than 80 provinces. The disease, while not harmful to humans, is highly contagious among pigs. The outbreak is part of a larger issue that was first detected in the Philippines in 2019, leading to the culling of thousands of pigs and a reduction in the domestic hog population. This has resulted in a reduced domestic pork supply, which the country has countered by increasing meat importation.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

MANILA: The Philippines' agriculture department on Wednesday (Mar 8) confirmed an outbreak of African swine fever in central Cebu province, and has deployed response teams to detect the extent of infection. The department's Bureau of Animal Industry said 58 out of 149 blood samples from Carcar City in Cebu tested positive for the disease, which is not harmful to humans but is highly contagious among pigs. The latest outbreak adds to the list of active African swine fever cases in 12 of the Southeast Asian country's more than 80 provinces, based on the agriculture department's latest data. "All swine raisers and stakeholders are encouraged to report any unusual pig mortalities and sickness to their respective agriculture/veterinary offices," the bureau said in a statement. African swine fever was first ...

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