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Quantitative assessment of social and economic impact of African swine fever outbreaks in northern Uganda

Quantitative assessment of social and economic impact of African swine fever outbreaks in northern Uganda

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dc.contributor.author Chenais, Erika
dc.contributor.author Boqvist, Sofia
dc.contributor.author Emanuelson, Ulf
dc.contributor.author von Bromssen, Claudia
dc.contributor.author Ouma, Emily
dc.contributor.author Aliro, Tonny
dc.contributor.author Masembe, Charles
dc.contributor.author Stahl, Karl
dc.contributor.author Sternberg-Lewerin, Susanna
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-01T21:58:01Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-01T21:58:01Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.identifier.issn 0167-5877
dc.identifier.uri http://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/48124
dc.description.abstract African swine fever (ASF) is one of the most important pig diseases, causing high case fatality rate and trade restrictions upon reported outbreaks. In Uganda, a low-income country with the largest pig population in East Africa, ASF is endemic. Animal disease impact is multidimensional and include social and economic impact along the value chain. In low-income settings, this impact keep people poor and push those that have managed to escape poverty back again. If the diseases can be controlled, their negative consequences can be mitigated. However, to successfully argue for investment in disease control, its cost-benefits need to be demonstrated. One part in the cost-benefit equations is disease impact quantification. The objective of this study was therefore to investigate the socio-economic impact of ASF outbreaks at household level in northern Uganda. In a longitudinal study, structured interviews with two hundred, randomly selected, pig-keeping households were undertaken three times with a six month interval. Questions related to family and pig herd demographics, pig trade and pig business. Associations between ASF outbreaks and economic and social impact variables were evaluated using linear regression models. The study showed that pigs were kept in extreme low-input-low-output farming systems involving only small monetary investments. Yearly incidence of ASF on household level was 19%. Increasing herd size was positively associated with higher economic output. The interaction between ASF outbreaks and the herd size showed that ASF outbreaks were negatively associated with economic output at the second interview occasion and with one out of two economic impact variables at the third interview occasion. No significant associations between the social impact variables included in the study and ASF outbreaks could be established. Trade and consumption of sick and dead pigs were coping strategies used to minimize losses of capital and animal protein. The results indicate that causality of social and economic impact of ASF outbreaks in smallholder systems is complex. Pigs are mostly kept as passive investments rather than active working capital, complicating economic analyses and further disqualifying disease control arguments based only on standard economic models. (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
dc.description.sponsorship Swedish research council/U-forsk [348-2013-146]
dc.description.sponsorship Wellcome TrustWellcome Trust [105684/Z/14/Z]
dc.language English
dc.publisher ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
dc.relation.ispartof Preventive Veterinary Medicine
dc.subject Animal Disease Impact
dc.subject Structured Interviews
dc.subject Smallholder Pig Farming
dc.subject Asf
dc.subject Socioeconomic
dc.subject Household Level
dc.title Quantitative assessment of social and economic impact of African swine fever outbreaks in northern Uganda
dc.type Article
dc.identifier.isi 000407406600017
dc.identifier.doi 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2017.06.002
dc.identifier.pmid 28716195
dc.publisher.city AMSTERDAM
dc.publisher.address PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
dc.identifier.eissn 1873-1716
dc.identifier.volume 144
dc.identifier.spage 134
dc.identifier.epage 148
dc.subject.wc Veterinary Sciences
dc.subject.sc Veterinary Sciences
dc.description.oa Other Gold
dc.description.pages 15
dc.subject.kwp Smallholder Pig Production
dc.subject.kwp Production Systems
dc.subject.kwp Epidemiology
dc.subject.kwp Poverty
dc.subject.kwp Eradication
dc.subject.kwp Districts
dc.subject.kwp Benefits
dc.subject.kwp Spread
dc.description.affiliation Natl Vet Inst, Uppsala, Sweden
dc.description.affiliation Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Uppsala, Sweden
dc.description.affiliation Int Livestock Res Inst, Kampala, Uganda
dc.description.affiliation Gulu Dist Local Govt, Directorate Prod & Mkt, Gulu, Uganda
dc.description.affiliation Makerere Univ, Kampala, Uganda
dc.description.email erika.chenais@sva.se
dc.description.email soft.Boqvist@slu.se
dc.description.email ulf.Emanuelson@slu.se
dc.description.email claudia.von.Bromssen@slu.se
dc.description.email e.ouma@cgiar.org
dc.description.email alirotony@gmail.com
dc.description.email masembe@cns.mak.ac.ug
dc.description.email karl.stahl@sva.se
dc.description.email susanna.Sternberg-Lewerin@slu.se
dc.description.corr Chenais, E (corresponding author), Natl Vet Inst, Uppsala, Sweden.
dc.description.orcid von Bromssen, Claudia/0000-0002-1452-8696
dc.description.orcid Lewerin, Susanna Sternberg/0000-0001-7907-8377
dc.description.orcid Emanuelson, Ulf/0000-0001-7889-417X
dc.description.orcid Masembe, Charles/0000-0002-9581-0414
dc.description.orcid Chenais, Erika/0000-0002-2601-1256


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