Lindahl Johanna F, Young Jarrah, Wyatt Amanda, Young Mary, Alders Robyn, Bagnol Brigitte, Kibaya Augustino, Grace Delia
International Livestock Research Institute, PO Box 30709, Nairobi, 00100, Kenya.
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden.
Trop Anim Health Prod. 2019 Jan;51(1):213-220. doi: 10.1007/s11250-018-1679-3. Epub 2018 Aug 17.
Poultry are important for many poor households in developing countries, but there are many constraints to poultry production, including disease. One of the most important diseases of chickens is Newcastle disease (ND). Even though there are effective vaccines against this disease available in most countries, uptake by small-scale poultry keepers is often low. In this study, two areas in Kenya and Tanzania were studied, where some villages had received additional support to get vaccination and other villages had not. In Kenya, 320 households from 10 villages were interviewed, of which half of the villages had active promotion of vaccination through village-based advisors. In Tanzania, 457 households were interviewed, of which 241 came from villages that have had active support through either a project or government extension services. Knowledge about vaccines and the attitudes towards vaccinating against ND was evaluated using mixed multivariable logistic models. Results indicate that in Kenya, the most important determinants for understanding the function of a vaccine were having had support in the village and to have knowledge about ND signs, while in Tanzania gender and previous vaccine use were important in addition to having had support. Attitudes towards vaccination were mainly determined by knowledge, where more knowledge about how vaccines work in general or about ND contributed to more positive attitudes. Among Kenyan farmers that had never used the vaccine before, the amount of birds they lost to disease and predators also influenced attitudes. In conclusion, this study supports the notion that knowledge is a very important component of extension support and that simply making vaccines available may not be sufficient for high levels of uptake.
家禽对发展中国家的许多贫困家庭来说至关重要,但家禽生产面临诸多限制,包括疾病问题。鸡的最重要疾病之一是新城疫(ND)。尽管大多数国家都有针对这种疾病的有效疫苗,但小规模家禽养殖户的疫苗接种率往往很低。在本研究中,对肯尼亚和坦桑尼亚的两个地区进行了调查,其中一些村庄获得了额外支持以进行疫苗接种,而其他村庄则没有。在肯尼亚,对来自10个村庄的320户家庭进行了访谈,其中一半村庄通过村级顾问积极推广疫苗接种。在坦桑尼亚,对457户家庭进行了访谈,其中241户来自通过项目或政府推广服务获得积极支持的村庄。使用混合多变量逻辑模型评估了关于疫苗的知识以及对新城疫疫苗接种的态度。结果表明,在肯尼亚,理解疫苗功能的最重要决定因素是在村里获得支持以及了解新城疫症状,而在坦桑尼亚,除了获得支持外,性别和以前是否使用过疫苗也很重要。对疫苗接种的态度主要由知识决定,对疫苗一般工作原理或新城疫了解得越多,态度就越积极。在肯尼亚以前从未使用过疫苗的农民中,他们因疾病和捕食者而损失的家禽数量也影响了态度。总之,本研究支持这样一种观点,即知识是推广支持的一个非常重要的组成部分,仅仅提供疫苗可能不足以实现高接种率。