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Economic impact of peste des petits ruminants outbreak and vaccination cost in northwest Ethiopia

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Title Economic impact of peste des petits ruminants outbreak and vaccination cost in northwest Ethiopia
 
Creator Jemberu, Wudu T.
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Gebru, A.
Mekonnen, S.A.
Yirga, A.
Sibhatu, D.
Rushton, J.
 
Subject animal diseases
disease control
vaccination
pest of small ruminants
sheep
goats
small ruminants
 
Description This study was conducted to assess the economic impact and costs of PPR vaccination in Metema
district, northwest Ethiopia.
The economic impact of the disease was estimated from outbreak investigation and interviews of
233 smallholder farmers in PPR affected sub-districts. The cost of PPR vaccination was obtained
from vaccination programs in six sub-districts and from secondary data from the district veterinary
office. In investigated PPR outbreak, animal level PPR morbidity and mortality were, respectively,
50.7% and 21.6% in sheep and 51.3% and 25.1% in goats. In the sub-district 82.7% of sheep flocks
and 87% of goat flocks had PPR. The mean flock level loss for affected sheep flocks was USD 329
(95%CI: 250 -408) and USD 300 (95%CI: 247-353) for affected goat flocks. The losses in all study
flocks (including those without cases) during the outbreak equated to USD13.4 per sheep and
USD12.9 per goat. Mortality accounted for more than 70 % of the total losses in both sheep and
goat flocks. Vaccination costs for PPR was estimated at USD 0.13 per correctly vaccinated animal,
with delivering the vaccine to the animal accounting for 44% of vaccination costs. Based on the
estimated animal level economic losses from PPR and vaccination cost, it can be conjectured that
vaccination will pay if outbreaks of PPR in the district occur more often than once every 13 years,
without considering the sizeable long-term and indirect benefits of PPR control.
In conclusion, PPR causes high morbidity and mortality resulting in high economic loss, significantly
reducing the income and livelihoods of sheep and goat producers, and other value chain actors.
Vaccination reduces PPR impact in a cost-effective way and strengthening vaccination programs is
likely to reduce economic impact and improve livelihoods.
 
Date 2022-08-12
2022-08-30T10:03:55Z
2022-08-30T10:03:55Z
 
Type Presentation
 
Identifier Jemberu, W.T., Knight-Jones, T.J.D., Gebru, A., Mekonnen, S.A., Yirga, A., Sibhatu, D. and Rushton, J. 2022. Economic impact of peste des petits ruminants outbreak and vaccination cost in northwest Ethiopia. Oral presentation at the 16th International Symposium of Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics, Halifax, Canada, 12 August 2022. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120978
https://www.slideshare.net/ILRI/ppr-economic-impact
 
Language en
 
Relation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/119228
 
Rights CC-BY-4.0
Open Access
 
Format application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.presentationml.presentation
 
Publisher ILRI