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             Summary 
              Mechanisms to maintain the physiological and behavioural 
              stability of animals during long distance transport are explored 
              according to the epidemiological concept of the risk factor. The 
              purpose is to consider quality assurance and risk management as 
              two practical means of protecting animal health and welfare during 
              long distance transport. The hierarchy of welfare, health and disease 
              is treated as an indivisible whole to ensure that surveillance for 
              welfare will encompass surveillance for infectious disease and that 
              ethical consideration applies to the totality. Disease can have 
              devastating effects on the well-being of both animals and people. 
              Risk factors and epidemiological methods are explained and promoted 
              for use in managing the health and welfare of animals transported 
              over long distances. A 'one medicine' approach is emphasised and 
              the depiction of stress as the cost of adaptation to stressors or 
              the allostatic load is introduced to illuminate the challenges confronting 
              transported animals. Aspects of heat stress in cattle are explored 
              to illustrate how various sources of information, including inference 
              from general biological knowledge, can assist in characterising 
            risk factors that derive from the constitution of animals themselves.
            
              Keywords 
              Animal, 
              Behaviour, Epidemiology, Ethics, Long distance, Physiology, Risk, 
              Transport, Welfare. 
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