“…Within the past two decades, however, the number of bTB‐infected dairy herds, the within‐herd bTB prevalence and the time required from detection to regaining the officially tuberculosis‐free status (OTF) increased (Picasso‐Risso, Gil, et al, 2019; Picasso‐Risso, Perez, et al, 2019) leading to unprecedented challenges in the control of bTB in Uruguay. The difficulty in controlling bTB has been associated with changes in dairy demographic structure and management (Picasso et al., 2017; Picasso‐Risso, Gil, et al, 2019; Picasso‐Risso, Perez, et al, 2019), including larger herds (>360 animals), higher animal density (DIEA, 2018), increased animal movements and more intensive animal rearing than traditional dairy farming prior to the 1990s (Picasso et al., 2017). In this context, the question is whether the current Uruguayan bTB programme is sufficient to control bTB in herds once the infection is confirmed and some level of within‐herd transmission is suspected.…”