Publications by authors named "Darren Michael Green"

Veterinary surveillance frequently requires study design for freedom-from-disease testing, specifying a sample size to balance higher statistical power with larger sample sizes against increased research and ethics costs, with the recognition that tests can generate false positive and negative results: i.e., tests exhibit imperfect sensitivity and specificity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Live shrimp movements pose a potential route for site-to-site transmission of acute hepatopancreatic necrosis disease (AHPND) and other shrimp diseases. We present the first application of network theory to study shrimp epizootiology, providing quantitative information about the live shrimp movement network of Thailand (LSMN), and supporting practical and policy implementations of disease surveillance and control measures. We examined the LSMN over a 13-month period from March 2013 to March 2014, with data obtained from the Thailand Department of Fisheries.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Partitioning of contact networks into communities allows groupings of epidemiologically related nodes to be derived, that could inform the design of disease surveillance and control strategies, e.g. contact tracing or design of 'firebreaks' for disease spread.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Networks are increasingly being used as an epidemiological tool for studying the potential for disease transmission through animal movements in farming industries. We analysed the network of live fish movements for commercial salmonids in Scotland in 2003. This network was found to have a mixture of features both aiding and hindering disease transmission, hindered by being fragmented, with comparatively low mean number of connections (2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF