Back to Search
Start Over
Informal value chain actors’ knowledge and perceptions about zoonotic diseases and biosecurity in Kenya and the importance for food safety and public health
- Source :
- Tropical Animal Health and Production, Tropical Animal Health and Production 50 (2018) 3, Tropical Animal Health and Production, 50(3), 509-518
- Publication Year :
- 2017
- Publisher :
- Springer Netherlands, 2017.
-
Abstract
- Zoonotic diseases, transmitted from animals to humans, are a public health challenge in developing countries. Livestock value chain actors have an important role to play as the first line of defence in safeguarding public health. However, although the livelihood and economic impacts of zoonoses are widely known, adoption of biosecurity measures aimed at preventing zoonoses is low, particularly among actors in informal livestock value chains in low and middle-income countries. The main objective of this study was to investigate knowledge of zoonoses and adoption of biosecurity measures by livestock and milk value chain actors in Bura, Tana River County, in Kenya, where cattle, camels, sheep and goats are the main livestock kept. The study utilised a mixed methods approach, with a questionnaire survey administered to 154 value chain actors. Additional information was elicited through key informant interviews and participatory methods with relevant stakeholders outside the value chain. Our results found low levels of knowledge of zoonoses and low levels of adherence to food safety standards, with only 37% of milk traders knowing about brucellosis, in spite of a sero-prevalence of 9% in the small ruminants tested in this study, and no slaughterhouse worker knew about Q fever. Actors had little formal education (between 0 and 10%) and lacked training in food safety and biosecurity measures. Adoption of biosecurity measures by value chain actors was very low or non-existent, with only 11% of butchers wearing gloves. There was a gendered dimension, evidenced by markedly different participation in value chains and lower adoption rates and knowledge levels among female actors. Finally, cultural and religious practices were shown to play an important role in exposure and transmission of diseases, influencing perceptions and attitudes to risks and adoption of biosecurity measures.
- Subjects :
- Male
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Disease prevention
Food Safety
Epidemiology
Biosecurity
Disease transmission
Livestock value chains
0403 veterinary science
0302 clinical medicine
Food Animals
Zoonoses
Surveys and Questionnaires
Global health
Medicine
Dierlijke Productiesystemen
Infectious disease
Geography
Goats
Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology
04 agricultural and veterinary sciences
Ruminants
Livelihood
Dairying
Milk
Veterinary public health
Livestock
Female
Public Health
Q Fever
medicine.medical_specialty
040301 veterinary sciences
030231 tropical medicine
Animal Production Systems
Brucellosis
03 medical and health sciences
Environmental health
Animals
Humans
Value chain
Sheep
business.industry
Public health
Food safety
Kenya
Communicable Disease Control
Animal Science and Zoology
Cattle
Biosecurity measures
business
Regular Articles
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 15737438 and 00494747
- Volume :
- 50
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Tropical Animal Health and Production
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b558b3eeba9bdb8709679de9f226b9cb