Socioeconomic Impact of Foot and Mouth Disease Outbreaks on Smallholder Cattle Farmers in Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Agung Triatmojo, Budi Guntoro, Péter Strausz, Mujtahidah Anggriani Ummul Muzayyanah, Robi Agustiar, Szilvia Kusza

TL;DR
This study explores how socioeconomic factors influence the spread and impact of Foot and Mouth Disease among smallholder cattle farmers in Indonesia.
Contribution
The study provides empirical evidence linking farmer characteristics to FMD risk and economic loss, emphasizing targeted control strategies.
Findings
FMD increased treatment costs by IDR 258,000 to IDR 270,000 for infected farmers.
Farmer characteristics like income and decision-making roles heighten FMD infection risk.
FMD altered social behaviors related to animal health knowledge and practices.
Abstract
This study investigates how farmers’ social and demographic factors influence the spread of Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) in livestock and its economic impact on smallholder farmers in Indonesia. The goal was to assess the effects of these factors on FMD infection and the financial strain it places on farmers. The findings revealed that FMD altered farmers’ behaviors regarding animal health and increased their treatment costs. This study concluded that factors like economic situation, decision-making roles, and cattle ownership heightened the risk of FMD. It emphasizes the importance of prioritizing high-risk farmers in FMD control efforts to reduce both social and economic burdens. Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) poses significant challenges to livestock management and agricultural economies worldwide. This study examines the effect of farmers’ sociodemographic factors on livestock…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Disease Management and Epidemiology · Vector-Borne Animal Diseases · T-cell and Retrovirus Studies
