Hidano Arata, Holt Hannah, Durrance-Bagale Anna, Tak Mehroosh, Rudge James W
Communicable Disease Policy Research Group, Department of Global Health and Development, Faculty of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United kingdom.
Veterinary Epidemiology, Economics and Public Health Group, Royal Veterinary College, London, United Kingdom.
Front Vet Sci. 2022 Jul 29;9:915487. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2022.915487. eCollection 2022.
Improving livestock health is considered critical to address poverty, malnutrition and food insecurity in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Modifications of livestock management practices is also increasingly recognized as an important strategy to mitigate global threats such as climate change and novel disease emergence. Smallholders are, however, under various constraints which prohibit them from altering health practices for livestock and little is known about how the adoption of these practices may be promoted. The proposed scoping review aims to systematically map evidence around "what practices are (not) adopted by smallholders under what circumstances, how and why?."
We conducted initial scoping searches to broadly define types of animal health practices relevant for smallholders in LMICs and formulated search terms. A scoping review protocol was designed and registered. A systematic literature search will be conducted using electronic databases including CAB Abstract, Scopus, MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Web of Science Core Collection. Gray literature will be searched from AGRIS and Standards for Supporting Agricultural Livelihoods in Emergencies. Articles in English, pertaining to the animal health practices considered highly relevant will be considered eligible for inclusion. Articles will be screened at two stages by two independent reviewers; screening of titles, abstracts, and keywords, followed by full-article screening. The first reviewer will review 100% of the articles at both stages. The second reviewer will review a random sample of 20% of the articles at both stages. Any disagreements will be resolved using inputs from the third reviewer. A thematic analysis will be conducted to catalog contexts and mechanisms for adoption and discussed under a realist framework.
Understanding of the mechanisms underlying the adoption of animal health practices by livestock smallholders in LMICs is crucial for successful implementation of interventions including those which are based on a One Health approach. This review will identify the extent of this knowledge across disciplines and inform future research priorities for the design of effective and feasible interventions which can contribute toward Sustainable Development Goal 2.
This protocol is registered within the Open Science Framework (https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/FUQAX).
改善牲畜健康状况被认为是解决低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)贫困、营养不良和粮食不安全问题的关键。改变牲畜管理做法也日益被视为减轻气候变化和新疾病出现等全球威胁的重要战略。然而,小农户面临各种限制,无法改变牲畜的健康管理做法,而且对于如何促进这些做法的采用知之甚少。拟议的范围审查旨在系统地梳理关于“小农户在何种情况下(不)采用哪些做法、如何采用以及为何采用”的证据。
我们进行了初步范围检索,以广泛界定与LMICs小农户相关的动物健康管理做法类型,并制定了检索词。设计并注册了范围审查方案。将使用包括CAB文摘、Scopus、MEDLINE、EMBASE和科学引文索引核心合集在内的电子数据库进行系统文献检索。将从AGRIS和《紧急情况下支持农业生计标准》中检索灰色文献。符合条件的文章将是英文的,且与被认为高度相关的动物健康管理做法有关。文章将由两名独立评审员分两个阶段进行筛选;首先筛选标题、摘要和关键词,然后进行全文筛选。第一名评审员将在两个阶段审查100%的文章。第二名评审员将在两个阶段随机抽取20%的文章进行审查。任何分歧将通过第三名评审员的意见来解决。将进行主题分析,以梳理采用这些做法的背景和机制,并在现实主义框架下进行讨论。
了解LMICs牲畜小农户采用动物健康管理做法的潜在机制对于成功实施包括基于“同一个健康”方法的干预措施至关重要。本综述将确定各学科对此类知识的了解程度,并为未来研究重点提供信息,以设计有效且可行的干预措施,为实现可持续发展目标2做出贡献。
本方案已在开放科学框架(https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/FUQAX)中注册。