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Use the date inputs to select a date range of interest and press the ANALYSE button to run the analysis. The maps will show where, at region level for the UK and country level for the world, reported outbreaks have occurred and coloured by number of outbreaks reported.
Equine influenza (EI) is an acute, highly contagious, viral disease which can cause rapidly spreading outbreaks of respiratory disease in horses, donkeys, mules and other equine species. EI is exotic to Australia and would have a major impact on the Australian horse industry if it were to become established here.
24 sie 2020 · Equine influenza. Australia has officially declared itself free of Equine Influenza (EI). Australia is the only country in the world to have eradicated EI and proved scientifically that the virus is absent.
Is Equine Influenza fatal to horses? It is rarely fatal, but affected horses, especially performance horses, can take weeks to recover. In unusual circumstances it can cause deaths in foals, in very old animals or those already sick with other conditions. How is Equine Influenza spread?
Equine Influenza (EI) is a highly contagious though rarely fatal respiratory disease of horses, donkeys and mules and other equidae. The disease has been recorded throughout history, and when horses were the main draft animals, outbreaks of EI crippled the economy.
Equine Influenza (EI) is an acute, highly contagious viral disease which can cause rapidly spreading outbreaks of respiratory disease in horses and other equine species such as donkeys. This information has been provided by the Australian Veterinary Association.
Equine influenza occurs globally and is caused by two main strains of the virus: equine-1 (H7N7) and equine-2 (H3N8). The disease has a nearly 100 percent infection rate in an unvaccinated horse population that has not been previously exposed to the virus.