Showing posts with label biosecurity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biosecurity. Show all posts

Saturday, July 25, 2020

A Brave New World in a Pandemic


Coping with covid

Photo: CDC
For those in agriculture, nothing has stopped during the pandemic.  Food is life and for most, this means that Agriculture continues to operate daily to feed the masses.  In normal operations on poultry farms large and small, biosecurity has been and will be a normal practice.  What the pandemic has taught everyone else is what we need to do in order to protect ourselves from disease.  Operational biosecurity now needs to be practiced by everyone if everyone is to be protected.  Isolation (distancing), physical barriers (PPE), and sanitation routines (hand washing, surface cleaning) that were just germane to farms is now being practiced by all.  Until we have a working vaccine in place, all of us should strongly consider using sound biosecurity to keep themselves and those they love safe.  How well we practice these steps will show in the number of positive cases seen.

Monday, January 30, 2017

Managing Biosecurity in a changing landscape.

Take Time To Plan
 

While we would like to think that birds are fairly free of diseases, they can be challenged from time to time by what is in their environment.  With ABF/RWA programs and a reduction in available therapies there are fewer treatments available for common illness that may strike a flock.  Because of this, it is important to maintain a healthy environment by practicing great biosecurity.  By compartmentalizing and restricting movement of people and equipment among the birds, you reduce disease pressures on the flocks in your care.  Organic and other flocks that use outside access have to push the line of separation on their farms to the outer limits of where the birds may roam.  This means PPE and other sanitation methods may be needed to enter these pens for normal service.

Deliveries and other non-poultry visitors should be held to a minimum.  The use of Drop Boxes and other locked enclosures will help reduce traffic on the farm.  Review your documented biosecurity plan on a regular basis and make sure all who visit your location understand and follow your plan.