| Literature DB >> 30730883 |
Meritxell Donadeu1,2, Nick Nwankpa3, Bernadette Abela-Ridder4, Baptiste Dungu2,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most smallholder farmers (SHFs) and marginalized populations (MPs) in Africa, Asia, and Latin America depend on livestock for their livelihoods. However, significant numbers of these animals do not achieve their potential, die due to disease, or transmit zoonotic diseases. Existing vaccines could prevent and control some of these diseases, but frequently the vaccines do not reach SHFs, especially MPs, making it necessary for specific vaccine adoption strategies. PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30730883 PMCID: PMC6366725 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0006989
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Livestock poverty ladder, species preference, and gender.
Livestock species owned by the poor livestock keepers depend traditionally on their level of resources. Women usually prefer poultry, pigs, small ruminants and dairy cattle in small numbers, although there are exceptions. Some silhouettes obtained from: https://openclipart.org.
Fig 2Vaccine adoption.
Vaccine adoption is the result of vaccine availability, vaccine access, and vaccine demand [13]. Each component is required to achieve vaccine adoption. The figure assumes that the vaccine is safe and effective and that these are not limiting factors to vaccine adoption.
Weak links in the supply chain of existing animal vaccines according to the different disease categories.
Increased level of weakness is represented by a larger number of +.
| Vaccine supply | Manufacturing | Distribution | Commercial use | SHFs/ MPs use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cause economic losses also in developed countries | − | − | − | ++ |
| Cause economic losses only in developing countries | +++ | ++ | ++ | +++ |
| Diseases controlled by governments | + | ? | + | +++ |
| Neglected diseases | +++ | +++ | N/A | +++++ |
1Not considered a weak link.
2Usually vaccines for this group of diseases are produced by local or regional manufacturers and not by large multinational companies. In most cases, there are few manufacturers and not sufficient production capacity to meet the demand.
3Commercial farmers usually will find a way to access the vaccines they need and may buy them directly from the manufacturer or the importer.
4These vaccines are produced by local manufacturers but can also be produced by large multinational companies and be imported. In many instances, they are procured through tenders.
5Distribution depends on government strategies.
6In some countries, farmers need to have a certificate of vaccination in order to sell the animals, so they are compelled to pay for the vaccine and will establish a supply mechanism.
7 There are only one, or a few manufacturers at global level, and for some products, continuity of production is at risk due to a lack of demand.
Abbreviations: MPs, marginalized populations; N/A, not applicable; SHFs, smallholder farmers.
Potential strategies to secure vaccine production and increase vaccine use by SHFs and/or MPs according to the different disease categories.
Strategies are generic and might not apply to all diseases in each group, or in all countries. The different strategies need to be considered within local, national, and regional contexts. Some strategies may only provide a partial solution. See text for details.
| Group of diseases | Strategies at manufacturing level | Strategies to increase vaccine adoption by SHFs/MPs |
|---|---|---|
| Cause economic losses also in developed countries | Not applicable | |
| Cause economic losses only in developing countries | ||
| Diseases controlled by governments | ||
| Neglected diseases |
1Not considered to be a weakness in the vaccine supply chain.
Abbreviations: MPs, marginalized populations; SHFs, smallholder farmers.