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The tip of the iceberg: high-risk contacts for hemorrhagic fevers of swine in the Caribbean

Guillermo Arcega Castillo, Rachael Schulte, Michelle L Schultze, Luis Pablo Hervé-Claude, B C Birtcil, Lisa Boden, Juan Pablo Villanueva-Cabezas, Christa A Gallagher, María José Navarrete-Talloni, Andres M Perez, Rachel A Schambow

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

There are major gaps in understanding the transmission risk of hemorrhagic fevers of swine, such as African swine fever (ASF) and classical swine fever (CSF), in the Caribbean because animal-trade data are limited and fragmented. To address this gap, we reconstructed country-level directed trade networks from United Nations Comtrade data for 2022-2024 merged with participant input and analyzed them using social network analysis; nodes represent Caribbean jurisdictions with at least one trade tie, and edges represent reported movements of live pigs or pork products. Using these baselines, we conducted a participatory modeling exercise with 15 veterinary and agricultural officers from 10 Caribbean countries and territories during a regional ASF preparedness workshop in Saint Kitts. Network metrics were estimated for both pig and pork trade networks. Participatory input markedly expanded connectivity: for live pigs, the UN Comtrade network contained 6 edges and experts added 12 (18 total; 67% new). For pork products, the preliminary network contained 58 edges; participants added 42, bringing the total to 100 (42% new). The pork product network's most central exporters by out-degree were the Dominican Republic (13) and Trinidad and Tobago (12); the median out-degree was 3. The live-pig network remained sparse, with isolated sub-graphs. Despite a median out-degree of 1 across the live-pig network, Saint Kitts and Nevis led exports (out-degree 5), with pig movements to Montserrat, Sint Eustatius, Sint Maarten, Anguilla, and Antigua and Barbuda. These findings show that participatory approaches with local expertise fill data gaps, enhance preparedness, and support risk assessment.

Original languageEnglish
Article number44
Pages (from-to)1-16
Number of pages16
JournalVeterinary Research
Volume57
Issue number1
Early online date25 Feb 2026
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 25 Feb 2026

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • African Swine Fever/transmission
  • Animals
  • Caribbean Region/epidemiology
  • Classical Swine Fever/transmission
  • Commerce
  • Sus scrofa
  • Swine

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