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SA gets more foot-and-mouth vaccine doses as it battles to contain outbreak

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A further four million ⁠doses have been ordered from Dollvet.
South Africa’s (SA) government said on Wednesday that it had received two million doses of foot-and-mouth disease ​vaccine from Turkey, as authorities intensify efforts to ‌contain the country’s worst outbreak in years.
The vaccine, supplied by Turkey’s Dollvet, will be distributed to provinces in the coming days ​based on animal population and risk, the agriculture ​department said in a statement.
A further four million ⁠doses have been ordered from Dollvet.
Foot-and-mouth is a highly ​contagious viral infection that mainly affects cattle, causing painful ​blisters in the mouth and on hooves. Although it is not often fatal, especially among adult cattle, it affects livestock productivity.
The government ​has faced criticism from livestock farmers, who say they ​are suffering heavy losses over its handling of the outbreak, with ‌some ⁠threatening legal action.
An additional five million vaccine doses have been ordered from Argentina, with delivery expected in two batches once import approval is granted by the SA ​Health Products ​Regulatory Authority, the ⁠statement said.
In February, SA rolled out its first foot-and-mouth vaccine in 20 years in ​a bid to ease a shortage of ​inoculation ⁠doses.
The government is aiming to vaccinate 80% of SA’s national cattle herd, estimated at about 14 million.
The agriculture ⁠department said ​it would allocate some vaccine ​doses to the pork industry, as pigs can also be affected by ​foot-and-mouth.
–Reuters–
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