Department of Cultural Anthropology and Development Studies, and Radboud Social Cultural Research, Radboud University, 6525 XZ, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Malaria and Other Parasitic Diseases Division, Rwanda Biomedical Center, 7162, Kigali, Rwanda.
J Health Popul Nutr. 2023 Jan 23;42(1):6. doi: 10.1186/s41043-023-00345-x.
Evidence suggests a vicious cycle between rice cultivation and malaria control in Rwanda. Rice fields offer an attractive breeding ground for malaria vectors, which increases the disease burden in rice farming communities, and, consequently, reduces productivity in the rice sector. Community-based larval source management in rice fields is propagated as a sustainable solution to break this cycle. A sense of agency and ownership of malaria control interventions, as well as the mobilization of resources at the local level, are often considered preconditions for success. However, an evidence gap exists regarding the interaction between the agentive and financial dimension of local sustainability.
We conduct a larviciding pilot involving three groups; one group where rice farmers sprayed their fields under expert supervision, one group where rice farmers organised the larviciding campaign themselves, and a (non-sprayed) control group. We test whether the difference in agency between the intervention groups affects farmers' willingness-to-pay for a larviciding campaign. Willingness-to-pay is elicited in a contingent valuation exercise, more specifically a bidding game, and is assessed both before and after the pilot (n = 288). Difference-in-difference estimates are computed, using a propensity score matching technique. Supplementary data were collected in a survey and two focus group discussions for triangulation.
The high-agency (self-organised) group significantly outperforms the low-agency (expert-supervised) group in terms of maintaining its willingness to contribute financially. However, higher willingness-to-pay in the high-agency group does not appear to be driven by a stronger sense of ownership per se. The supplementary data indicate high levels of ownership in both treatment groups compared to the control group. A tentative explanation lies in diverging perceptions concerning the effectiveness of the pilot.
The study supports the idea that community-led organization of larval source management can prove instrumental in mobilizing finance for malaria control in low-income settings where rice production interferes with the fight against malaria. However, the causality is complex. Feelings of ownership do not appear the main driver of willingness-to-pay, at least not directly, which opens up the possibility of initiating community-driven malaria control interventions that promote the agentive and financial dimension of local sustainability simultaneously.
卢旺达的水稻种植与疟疾控制之间存在恶性循环的证据。稻田为疟疾传播媒介提供了一个有吸引力的滋生地,这增加了水稻种植社区的疾病负担,从而降低了水稻部门的生产力。以社区为基础的稻田幼虫源管理被宣传为打破这一循环的可持续解决方案。对疟疾控制干预措施的能动性和所有权意识,以及在地方一级调动资源,通常被认为是成功的前提条件。然而,在地方可持续性的能动性和财务维度之间的相互作用方面,仍然存在证据空白。
我们开展了一项涉及三个小组的幼虫杀灭试点;一组由水稻种植者在专家监督下喷洒他们的田地,一组由水稻种植者自行组织幼虫杀灭运动,还有一组(未喷洒)为对照组。我们测试干预组之间的能动性差异是否会影响农民对幼虫杀灭运动的支付意愿。支付意愿是通过条件价值评估实验(更具体地说是竞标游戏)来评估的,在试点前后(n=288)进行评估。使用倾向得分匹配技术计算差值差异估计。补充数据是通过调查和两次焦点小组讨论收集的,用于三角验证。
高能动性(自我组织)组在维持其财政捐款意愿方面明显优于低能动性(专家监督)组。然而,高能动性组较高的支付意愿似乎不是由所有权意识本身驱动的。补充数据表明,与对照组相比,两个治疗组的所有权意识都很高。一个初步的解释在于,对于试点的有效性存在不同的看法。
这项研究支持这样一种观点,即在低收入环境中,当水稻生产干扰疟疾防治时,社区主导的幼虫源管理组织可以为疟疾控制动员资金提供帮助。然而,因果关系很复杂。所有权意识似乎不是支付意愿的主要驱动因素,至少不是直接的,这为同时促进地方可持续性的能动性和财务维度,启动社区驱动的疟疾控制干预措施提供了可能性。