World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Animal Science and Veterinary

D-Index
59
Citations
11203
World Ranking
355
National Ranking
40

Overview

George Gettinby was affiliated with the University of Strathclyde in the United Kingdom. Their academic career included contributions to scientific research, although specific details on their fields of study, research topics, publications, or awards are not available from the provided data.

No records of recent papers, frequent co-authors, publication venues, or book publications were listed. Likewise, there is no information on their main or subfields of study, or the main topics of their work.

The available data indicates that George Gettinby is deceased. No details regarding the timeline of their career, impacts, or other professional activities were provided.

Best Publications

  • Positive and negative effects of widespread badger culling on tuberculosis in cattle

    Christl A Donnelly;Rosie Woodroffe;D R Cox;F John Bourne

  • Impact of localized badger culling on tuberculosis incidence in British cattle

    Christl A. Donnelly;Rosie Woodroffe;D. R. Cox;John Bourne

  • Effects of culling on badger meles meles spatial organization: implications for the control of bovine tuberculosis

    Rosie Woodroffe;Christl A. Donnelly;D. R. Cox;F. John Bourne

  • Culling and cattle controls influence tuberculosis risk for badgers

    Rosie Woodroffe;Christl A. Donnelly;Helen E. Jenkins;W. Thomas Johnston

  • The efficacy of emamectin benzoate against infestations of Lepeophtheirus salmonis on farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L) in Scotland, 2002-2006

    Fiona Lees;Mark Baillie;George Gettinby;Crawford W. Revie

  • 405 nm light technology for the inactivation of pathogens and its potential role for environmental disinfection and infection control

    Michelle MacLean;Karen McKenzie;John Anderson;George Gettinby

  • Bacillus Calmette-Guérin vaccination reduces the severity and progression of tuberculosis in badgers

    Mark A. Chambers;Fiona Rogers;Fiona Rogers;Richard J. Delahay;Sandrine Lesellier

  • Assessing the convergence of Markov Chain Monte Carlo methods: an example from evaluation of diagnostic tests in absence of a gold standard.

    Nils Toft;Giles T. Innocent;George Gettinby;Stuart W.J. Reid

  • How hosts control worms

    M.J. Stear;K. Bairden;J.L. Duncan;P.H. Holmes

  • Impacts of widespread badger culling on cattle tuberculosis: concluding analyses from a large-scale field trial

    Christl A. Donnelly;Christl A. Donnelly;Gao Wei;W. Thomas Johnston;D.R. Cox;D.R. Cox

  • Effects of Temperature, Water Activity, and Incubation Time on Production of Aflatoxins and Cyclopiazonic Acid by an Isolate of Aspergillus flavus in Surface Agar Culture

    N Gqaleni;J E Smith;J Lacey;G Gettinby

  • Lyme borreliosis habitat assessment.

    J.S. Gray;O. Kahl;J.N. Robertson;M. Daniel

  • Body-weight changes during growth in puppies of different breeds.

    Amanda J. Hawthorne;Derek Booles;Pat A. Nugent;George Gettinby

  • The efficacy of Salenvac, a Salmonella enterica subsp. Enterica serotype Enteritidis iron-restricted bacterin vaccine, in laying chickens

    Martin J. Woodward;G. Gettinby;M. F. Breslin;J. D. Corkish

  • BCG Vaccination Reduces Risk of Tuberculosis Infection in Vaccinated Badgers and Unvaccinated Badger Cubs

    Stephen P. Carter;Mark A. Chambers;Stephen P. Rushton;Mark D. F. Shirley

  • Herd-level risk factors associated with tuberculosis breakdowns among cattle herds in England before the 2001 foot-and-mouth disease epidemic.

    W. T Johnston;G Gettinby;D. R Cox;C. A Donnelly

  • Spatial association of Mycobacterium bovis infection in cattle and badgers Meles meles

    R. Woodroffe;C. A. Donnelly;W. T. Johnston;F. J. Bourne

  • Sentinel practice-based survey of the management and health of horses in northern Britain.

    D.J. Mellor;S. Love;R. Walker;G. Gettinby

  • BOVINE TUBERCULOSIS IN CATTLE AND BADGERS IN LOCALIZED CULLING AREAS

    Rosie Woodroffe;Christl A. Donnelly;D. R. Cox;Peter Gilks

  • Identifying epidemiological factors affecting sea lice Lepeophtheirus salmonis abundance on Scottish salmon farms using general linear models

    Crawford W. Revie;G. Gettinby;J. W. Treasurer;C. Wallace

  • The genetic basis of resistance to Ostertagia circumcincta in lambs

    M.J. Stear;K. Bairden;S.C. Bishop;J. Buitkamp

  • A quantitative risk assessment for the occurrence of campylobacter in chickens at the point of slaughter.

    E. Hartnett;L.A. Kelly;D. Newell;M. Wooldridge

  • The processes influencing the distribution of parasitic nematodes among naturally infected lambs

    M.J. Stear;K. Bairden;S. C. Bishop;G. Gettinby

  • Temporal, environmental and management factors influencing the epidemiological patterns of sea lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) infestations on farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) in Scotland

    Crawford W Revie;George Gettinby;James W Treasurer;Gordon H Rae

  • Susceptibility to African trypanosomiasis of N'Dama and Zebu cattle in an area of Glossina morsitans submorsitans challenge.

    M. Murray;D.J. Clifford;G. Gettinby;W.F. Snow

Frequent Co-Authors

David R. Cox
David R. Cox University of Oxford
Christl A. Donnelly
Christl A. Donnelly University of Oxford
Rosie Woodroffe
Rosie Woodroffe Zoological Society of London
K. Bairden
K. Bairden University of Glasgow
Richard S. Clifton-Hadley
Richard S. Clifton-Hadley Animal and Plant Health Agency
Chris L. Cheeseman
Chris L. Cheeseman Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs
Quintin McKellar
Quintin McKellar University of Hertfordshire
Michael J. Stear
Michael J. Stear La Trobe University
J. Armour
J. Armour University of Glasgow
Sandy Love
Sandy Love University of Glasgow

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