Animal disease
Vigilance and good stockmanship are vital in the fight against animal disease. Monitoring animals for signs of disease, and following good farming practices are essential ways of reducing the risk of disease and preventing the spread of disease during an outbreak.
Defra’s Give Disease the Boot campaign provides livestock owners and veterinarians with information on a range of diseases and advice on how best to protect the health of their animals and the health of the farming industry.
This is your gateway to information on animal disease - what you can do to minimise the risk and information on the diseases you must report.
Information to help prevent disease
- Be vigilant - know how to spot signs of disease from avian influenza and bluetongue to rabies and scrapie.
- Prevent disease - the latest information on how to prevent disease through good farming practices.
- Practice rapid reporting - there are some animal diseases that must be reported by law. If you suspect these diseases, you must act and immediately notify your local Animal Health Divisional Office.
- Register here for Animal Health's disease alerts service.
- Zoonoses - find out which animal diseases may have implications for human health.
- Endemic diseases - full details on diseases typically present in the UK.
- Monitoring disease abroad - Defra monitors disease outbreaks around the world and reports on the latest developments and risks.
- UK veterinary surveillance - find out how Defra works with partners to provide warnings and rapid detection of UK disease threats.
- Poultry keepers with more than 50 birds should register with the GB Poultry Register.
Latest news
17 July 2008 - News release: Extending use of the GB Poultry Register.
17 June 2008 - Information bulletin: World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) grants UK 'controlled' BSE risk status.
3 June 2008 - News release: Avian Influenza H7 confirmed in Oxfordshire. Further information is also available on Defra's AI website.
More...
See also
- Animal pathogens - organisms and associated derivatives which cause disease.
Page last modified:
July 17, 2008

