AI Article Synopsis

  • Thailand has experienced significant economic losses due to foot and mouth disease (FMD) outbreaks, prompting the need for effective forecasting methods for surveillance and control.
  • The study used various time-series models, including SARIMA, ETS, NNAR, and TBATS, to analyze 1209 monthly FMD episodes from 2010 to 2020, revealing a stable trend with increasing episodes from 2014 to 2020 and a seasonal peak from September to November.
  • The best-performing models highlighted the importance of incorporating seasonality and non-linear trends, suggesting that stronger control strategies in Thailand and its FMD-endemic neighboring countries are essential to prevent future outbreaks.

Article Abstract

Thailand is one of the countries where foot and mouth disease outbreaks have resulted in considerable economic losses. Forecasting is an important warning technique that can allow authorities to establish an FMD surveillance and control program. This study aimed to model and forecast the monthly number of FMD outbreak episodes (n-FMD episodes) in Thailand using the time-series methods, including seasonal autoregressive integrated moving average (SARIMA), error trend seasonality (ETS), neural network autoregression (NNAR), and Trigonometric Exponential smoothing state−space model with Box−Cox transformation, ARMA errors, Trend and Seasonal components (TBATS), and hybrid methods. These methods were applied to monthly n-FMD episodes (n = 1209) from January 2010 to December 2020. Results showed that the n-FMD episodes had a stable trend from 2010 to 2020, but they appeared to increase from 2014 to 2020. The outbreak episodes followed a seasonal pattern, with a predominant peak occurring from September to November annually. The single-technique methods yielded the best-fitting time-series models, including SARIMA(1,0,1)(0,1,1)12, NNAR(3,1,2)12,ETS(A,N,A), and TBATS(1,{0,0},0.8,{<12,5>}. Moreover, SARIMA-NNAR and NNAR-TBATS were the hybrid models that performed the best on the validation datasets. The models that incorporate seasonality and a non-linear trend performed better than others. The forecasts highlighted the rising trend of n-FMD episodes in Thailand, which shares borders with several FMD endemic countries in which cross-border trading of cattle is found common. Thus, control strategies and effective measures to prevent FMD outbreaks should be strengthened not only in Thailand but also in neighboring countries.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9320723PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v14071367DOI Listing

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