Pastoralists’ utilization and preferences for stakeholders and methods in livestock disease reporting and response in Northern Kenya: a participatory study
Derrick Noah Sentamu, Raphael Lotira Arasio, Dennis N. Makau, Joshua Orungo Onono

TL;DR
This study explores how pastoralists in Northern Kenya report and respond to livestock diseases, emphasizing the role of community members over government services.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into pastoralists’ preferences for disease reporting methods and stakeholders in a resource-limited setting.
Findings
Livestock owners and community members are the primary actors in disease reporting and response.
Mobile phones are increasingly used for disease reporting, showing a marked rise in usage since 2001.
Synthetic drugs are the most common treatment method, with this practice increasing since the 1980s.
Abstract
Livestock disease surveillance is important in early detection and control of diseases. In resource constrained settings, passive surveillance is predominately used, a system that relies heavily on the community to share information on livestock disease events for eventual response by relevant stakeholders. This study aimed to understand pastoralists’ utilization and reasons considered when choosing methods or stakeholders for reporting or responding to livestock disease occurrences in herds. The study was conducted in Marsabit county in Northern Kenya with pastoralists. Between August 2023 to August 2024, data was collected using participatory epidemiology tools including pairwise ranking and matrix scoring to profile the stakeholders and utilization of different methods with the respective reasons considered when choosing these for livestock disease reporting or response. Summary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Disease Management and Epidemiology · Rangeland Management and Livestock Ecology · Zoonotic diseases and public health
