School of Water, Energy and the Environment, Cranfield University, Bedford MK43 0AL, UK.
Royal Agricultural University, Cirencester, GL7 6JS, UK.
Prev Vet Med. 2023 Nov;220:106053. doi: 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2023.106053. Epub 2023 Oct 18.
Johne's Disease (JD) is an infectious ruminant disease that can cause economic loss for famers through reduced milk yields and infertility and has negative implications for animal welfare. JD is endemic in the dairy populations of many countries and there has been significant effort by governments and industry to try and control it. However, these efforts have had limited success. Many studies look at individual control programmes or the adoption of Johne's control measures; however a wider perspective on what drives farmer participation Johne's control does not currently exist. This study seeks to fill this gap by conducting a systematic review informed by the PRISMA statement. The results suggest that psychological factors such as participation fatigue, cognitive dissidence over animal welfare and not having first-hand experience of the disease act as barriers to Johne's control. To better promote Johne's control, this review emphasises that control programmes need to engage farmers, advisers, and supply chain actors in their design and delivery of control programmes to account for differing attitudes and levels of knowledge.
约翰氏病(JD)是一种传染性反刍动物疾病,可通过降低产奶量和降低生育率给农民造成经济损失,并对动物福利产生负面影响。 JD 在许多国家的奶牛种群中流行,政府和行业已做出巨大努力试图控制它。 但是,这些努力收效甚微。 许多研究着眼于单个控制计划或采用约翰氏病控制措施; 然而,目前尚不存在对促使农民参与约翰氏病控制的因素的更广泛看法。 本研究通过 PRISMA 声明提供的系统审查来填补这一空白。 结果表明,参与疲劳,对动物福利的认知分歧以及没有疾病的第一手经验等心理因素是控制约翰氏病的障碍。 为了更好地促进约翰氏病的控制,本综述强调控制计划需要让农民,顾问和供应链参与者参与其设计和实施,以考虑到不同的态度和知识水平。