Hydatids now history, but care needed to keep it away
New Zealand has been declared provisionally free of hydatids and notification of this freedom is today being announced
to the OIE – the international animal health organisation.
The Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry’s Director of Animal Biosecurity, Derek Belton, says a significant milestone
has been reached with this declaration, which has been made after a decade of virtually clear surveillance results.
Hydatids is caused by a tapeworm which lives in the gut of dogs. Its life-cycle also involves an intermediate host,
which in this country is mainly sheep or sometimes cattle. Humans can also be a host and hydatids can pose a serious
risk to human health through the formation of cysts in vital organs.
Since 1946, the highest number of people per year in New Zealand who were hospitalised with hydatids was 103 in 1953.
This compares with seven cases notified to the Ministry of Health in 2001. These people were aged between 44 and 72 and
would have caught the infection as children, with the disease causing problems many years later. New infections have
been rare since the 1970s.
Dr Belton says MAF has opted for declaring ‘provisional’ freedom only at this stage. “Given the long life cycle of the
disease, it would be premature to say we’re totally in the clear. If, after five years of animal screening, we find no
further evidence of hydatids, we will be able to make a case for what’s known as ‘full country freedom’,” he says.
Achieving this provisional free status is quite a coup for New Zealand. Hydatids is widespread in the world and
eradication has only been attempted on geographically remote islands including Iceland, the Falklands, Cyprus and
Tasmania.
Derek Belton says the successful eradication is due largely to the enormous effort made by field officers and local
authority hydatids control officers who, under the direction of the National Hydatids Council, worked for 45 years to
rid New Zealand of the parasite.
“Many Kiwis will remember the visits by hydatids control officers to dose the pet dog, or the dog dosing strips around
the country.”