Journal
TRANSBOUNDARY AND EMERGING DISEASES
Volume 59, Issue 2, Pages 117-127Publisher
WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1865-1682.2011.01247.x
Keywords
farmer knowledge; Cambodia; cattle health and production; transboundary disease; risk of transmission; village-level biosecurity; internal parasites; foot-and-mouth disease
Categories
Funding
- Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR) [AH 2006/159]
- Crawford Fund
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Farmer knowledge surveys were conducted in 2008 and 2010 in Cambodia to evaluate the impact of a research project studying interventions that can improve cattle production and health, including biosecurity and practices relating to risks of transmission of transboundary diseases. The project hypothesis is that by increasing the value of smallholder-owned large ruminants through nutritional interventions and improved marketing, knowledge-based interventions including risk management for infectious diseases such as foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) can be implemented into a more sustainable pathway for rural development. Between 2008 and 2010, significant improvements in farmer knowledge and attitudes were recorded in three villages in three provinces of southern Cambodia. This was achieved through participatory applied field research, on the job training plus formal training programmes. No cases of FMD were recorded during the study period in the high-intervention (HI) villages despite the common occurrence of the disease in a nearby low-intervention and many other villages in the three provinces. Whilst it is likely that protection of these villages from FMD infection was from increasing the herd immunity by vaccination, it could also have been partly because of a decrease in risk behaviours by farmers as a result of their increasing knowledge of biosecurity. The research indicates that smallholder farmers are motivated by nutritional interventions that improve the value of their cattle bank and offer better marketing opportunities. This provides a more receptive environment for introduction of disease risk management for infectious and other production limiting diseases, best implemented for smallholder farmers in Cambodia by intensive training programmes. In lieu of a widespread public awareness programme to deliver mass education of smallholder farmers in disease prevention and biosecurity, livestock development projects in South-East Asia should be encouraged to include training in disease risk management as an important intervention if the current momentum for trade in large ruminant livestock and large ruminant meat is to continue to progress and contribute to addressing global food security concerns.
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