Efficacy and adoption of strategies for avian flu control in developing countries

In this paper, we present the results of a two-stage expert elicitation (Delphi) study conducted to provide input to contingent valuation (CV) studies. These CV studies are designed to estimate the benefits of various public and private strategies for the control of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza...

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Main Authors: Birol, Ekin, Asare-Marfo, Dorene, Yakhshilikov, Yorbol
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/4311
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spelling ftifpriir:oai:ebrary.ifpri.org:p15738coll2/4311 2024-09-15T17:56:49+00:00 Efficacy and adoption of strategies for avian flu control in developing countries A Delphi study Birol, Ekin Asare-Marfo, Dorene Yakhshilikov, Yorbol 2010 33 pages http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/4311 English eng eng International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) Washington, D.C. IFPRI Discussion Paper 1023 IFPRIDP01023 4311 http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/4311 Open Access IFPRI Adoption commercial sector disease risk introduction and spread efficacy expert elicitation Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza HPAI noncommercial sector private disease risk minimization strategies public disease risk minimization strategies semicommercial sector small-scale poultry producers delphi study Discussion paper 2010 ftifpriir 2024-08-28T03:41:02Z In this paper, we present the results of a two-stage expert elicitation (Delphi) study conducted to provide input to contingent valuation (CV) studies. These CV studies are designed to estimate the benefits of various public and private strategies for the control of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) across the study countries of Ethiopia, Ghana, Indonesia, Kenya, and Nigeria. The results of these CV studies are expected to feed into the cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness analyzes, which will be conducted to identify the effective HPAI control strategies in each study country. The information gathered through the Delphi study included (1) definitions of the small-scale producers (noncommercial/semicommercial and commercial) across the study countries, (2) estimations of the efficacy of various private and public control strategies in HPAI control, and (3) estimates of the proportion of poultry producers who are expected to adopt these control strategies under different scenarios. In this Delphi study, we collected data from 23 experts and analyzed the data by using statistical analysis methods. The results reveal that small-scale flocks are significantly larger in Indonesia, compared to the four African countries. The efficacy levels of both private and public HPAI control strategies investigated are significantly higher for commercial producers than for their noncommercial/semicommercial counterparts. Across private strategies and study countries, regular monitoring is thought to have the highest efficacy for those in the noncommercial/semicommercial sector, whereas regular disinfection and containment in hard material (as a combined strategy) was found to be the most effective strategy in minimizing risk in the commercial sector. Across public strategies and study countries, experts see surveillance by veterinary services as the most effective public sector HPAI control strategy in both the noncommercial/semicommercial and commercial sectors. Finally, according to the experts, small-scale poultry ... Report Avian flu IFPRI Knowledge Collections (International Food Policy Research Institute)
institution Open Polar
collection IFPRI Knowledge Collections (International Food Policy Research Institute)
op_collection_id ftifpriir
language English
topic Adoption
commercial sector
disease risk introduction and spread
efficacy
expert elicitation
Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza
HPAI
noncommercial sector
private disease risk minimization strategies
public disease risk minimization strategies
semicommercial sector
small-scale poultry producers
delphi study
spellingShingle Adoption
commercial sector
disease risk introduction and spread
efficacy
expert elicitation
Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza
HPAI
noncommercial sector
private disease risk minimization strategies
public disease risk minimization strategies
semicommercial sector
small-scale poultry producers
delphi study
Birol, Ekin
Asare-Marfo, Dorene
Yakhshilikov, Yorbol
Efficacy and adoption of strategies for avian flu control in developing countries
topic_facet Adoption
commercial sector
disease risk introduction and spread
efficacy
expert elicitation
Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza
HPAI
noncommercial sector
private disease risk minimization strategies
public disease risk minimization strategies
semicommercial sector
small-scale poultry producers
delphi study
description In this paper, we present the results of a two-stage expert elicitation (Delphi) study conducted to provide input to contingent valuation (CV) studies. These CV studies are designed to estimate the benefits of various public and private strategies for the control of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) across the study countries of Ethiopia, Ghana, Indonesia, Kenya, and Nigeria. The results of these CV studies are expected to feed into the cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness analyzes, which will be conducted to identify the effective HPAI control strategies in each study country. The information gathered through the Delphi study included (1) definitions of the small-scale producers (noncommercial/semicommercial and commercial) across the study countries, (2) estimations of the efficacy of various private and public control strategies in HPAI control, and (3) estimates of the proportion of poultry producers who are expected to adopt these control strategies under different scenarios. In this Delphi study, we collected data from 23 experts and analyzed the data by using statistical analysis methods. The results reveal that small-scale flocks are significantly larger in Indonesia, compared to the four African countries. The efficacy levels of both private and public HPAI control strategies investigated are significantly higher for commercial producers than for their noncommercial/semicommercial counterparts. Across private strategies and study countries, regular monitoring is thought to have the highest efficacy for those in the noncommercial/semicommercial sector, whereas regular disinfection and containment in hard material (as a combined strategy) was found to be the most effective strategy in minimizing risk in the commercial sector. Across public strategies and study countries, experts see surveillance by veterinary services as the most effective public sector HPAI control strategy in both the noncommercial/semicommercial and commercial sectors. Finally, according to the experts, small-scale poultry ...
format Report
author Birol, Ekin
Asare-Marfo, Dorene
Yakhshilikov, Yorbol
author_facet Birol, Ekin
Asare-Marfo, Dorene
Yakhshilikov, Yorbol
author_sort Birol, Ekin
title Efficacy and adoption of strategies for avian flu control in developing countries
title_short Efficacy and adoption of strategies for avian flu control in developing countries
title_full Efficacy and adoption of strategies for avian flu control in developing countries
title_fullStr Efficacy and adoption of strategies for avian flu control in developing countries
title_full_unstemmed Efficacy and adoption of strategies for avian flu control in developing countries
title_sort efficacy and adoption of strategies for avian flu control in developing countries
publisher International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)
publishDate 2010
url http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/4311
genre Avian flu
genre_facet Avian flu
op_relation IFPRI Discussion Paper
1023
IFPRIDP01023
4311
http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/4311
op_rights Open Access
IFPRI
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