| Literature DB >> 36056387 |
Francis Sena Nuvey1,2, Jalil Arkoazi3,4, Jan Hattendorf3,4, Gloria Ivy Mensah5, Kennedy Kwasi Addo5, Günther Fink3,4, Jakob Zinsstag3,4, Bassirou Bonfoh6.
Abstract
Agriculture in general, and livestock production in particular, serve as a livelihood source for many people in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). In many settings, lack of control of infectious diseases hampers livestock productivity, undermining the livelihood of rural populations. This scoping review sought to identify veterinary interventions previously evaluated as well as their relative effectiveness in controlling infectious livestock diseases. To be included, papers had to be written in English, German or French, and had to describe the effectiveness and/or profitability of preventive veterinary intervention(s) against anthrax, blackleg, bovine tuberculosis, brucellosis, contagious bovine pleuropneumonia, contagious caprine pleuropneumonia, foot-and-mouth disease, goat pox, lumpy skin disease, pasteurellosis, peste des petits ruminants, and/or sheep pox in any SSA country. Of the 2748 publications initially screened, 84 met our inclusion criteria and were analyzed. Most of the studies (n = 73, 87%) evaluated the effectiveness and/or profitability of vaccination, applied exclusively, applied jointly with, or compared to strategies like deworming, antimicrobial treatment, surveillance, feed supplementation, culling and dipping in reducing morbidity and/or mortality to livestock diseases. The effectiveness and/or profitability of antimicrobial treatment (n = 5), test and slaughter (n = 5), and use of lay animal health workers (n = 1) applied exclusively, were evaluated in the other studies. Vaccination was largely found to be both effective and with positive return on investment. Ineffective vaccination was mainly due to loss of vaccine potency under unfavorable field conditions like adverse weather events, cold chain failure, and mismatch of circulating pathogen strain and the vaccines in use.In summary, vaccination is the most effective and profitable means of controlling infectious livestock diseases in SSA. However, to achieve effective control of these diseases, its implementation must integrate pathogen surveillance, and optimal vaccine delivery tools, to overcome the reported field challenges.Entities:
Keywords: Effectiveness; Infectious disease; One health; Preventive interventions; Profitability; Ruminant livestock; Vaccination
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36056387 PMCID: PMC9438146 DOI: 10.1186/s12917-022-03428-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.792
Fig. 1Steps followed during selection of studies for inclusion in the review
Fig. 2Geographical distribution of studies in the review
Summarized characteristics of studies reviewed
| Variables | Description | Number of studies (references) |
|---|---|---|
| Before year 2000 | 20 [ | |
| Year 2000–2019 | 23 [ | |
| West Africa | 20 [ | |
| Central Africa | 6 [ | |
| East Africa | 40 [ | |
| Southern Africa | 14 [ | |
| Two or more regions | 4 [ | |
| Effectiveness of intervention | 63 [ | |
| Cost-benefits of intervention | 17 [ | |
| Effectiveness and cost-benefits | 4 [ | |
| Experimental study | 51 [ | |
| Cross-sectional study | 16 [ | |
| Secondary data analysis | 8 [ | |
| Cohort study | 2 [ | |
| Mixed (Two or more study designs) | 7 [ | |
| Cattle | 61 [ | |
| Sheep | 2 [ | |
| Goats | 12 [ | |
| Buffalo | 1 [ | |
| Mixed (large and small ruminants) | 4 [ | |
| Mixed (only small ruminants) | 4 [ | |
| Contagious bovine pleuropneumonia | 28 [ | |
| Foot and mouth disease | 15 [ | |
| Bovine tuberculosis | 10 [ | |
| Pestes des petits ruminants | 9 [ | |
| Lumpy skin disease | 7 [ | |
| Blackleg | 2 [ | |
| Brucellosis | 2 [ | |
| Contagious caprine pleuropneumonia | 2 [ | |
| Pasteurellosis | 2 [ | |
| Two or more infectious diseases | 7 [ |
Distribution of the interventions applied against the infectious diseases of interest
| Intervention | Study design | Frequency | Study reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anthrax | 1 | [ | |
| Blackleg | 3 | [ | |
| Bovine tuberculosis | 6 | [ | |
| Brucellosis | 1 | [ | |
| Contagious bovine pleuropneumonia | 23 | [ | |
| Contagious caprine pleuropneumonia | 3 | [ | |
| Foot and mouth disease | 13 | [ | |
| Goat pox | 2 | [ | |
| Lumpy skin disease | 7 | [ | |
| Pasteurellosis | 2 | [ | |
| Pestes des petits ruminants | 9 | [ | |
| Contagious bovine pleuropneumonia | 3 | [ | |
| Anthrax | 1 | [ | |
| Pasteurellosis | 3 | [ | |
| Pestes des petits ruminants | 6 | [ | |
| Contagious bovine pleuropneumonia | 1 | [ | |
| Contagious bovine pleuropneumonia | 3 | [ | |
| Foot and mouth disease | 2 | [ | |
| Bovine tuberculosis | 4 | [ | |
| Brucellosis | 1 | [ | |
| Anthrax | 1 | [ | |
| Blackleg | 1 | ||
| Contagious caprine pleuropneumonia | 1 |
Fig. 3Effectiveness of preventive interventions against morbidity and mortality in ruminant livestock. The y-axis shows the specific diseases evaluated by species of livestock, with included study references in parenthesis. The x-axis shows the protection rates offered by the interventions against the specified diseases on a percentage scale. Interventions that did not offer protection against a disease in an included study have a 0% protection rate on the scale. Shapes are used to distinguish between study types while colors distinguish between the different preventive interventions evaluated in the included studies. “randomized” represents experimental studies implemented under controlled clinical conditions while “random. (field)” represents experimental studies implemented under natural field conditions. “epidemiological” denotes all other study types except experimental studies implemented in the included studies. “AM Tx” denotes antimicrobial treatment. “other” denotes the other interventions including deworming and dipping. The position of shapes on the percentage scale denote the protection rates of the interventions against morbidity to the specified diseases of interest in the included studies.”+” in a shape represents protection rate of the interventions against mortality to the specified disease. “b” denotes a study that evaluated test and slaughter strategy in buffalos
Fig. 4Profitability of preventive interventions in controlling infectious diseases in ruminant livestock. The y-axis shows the specific diseases evaluated by species of livestock, with included study references in parenthesis. The x-axis shows the profitability of the interventions in controlling the specified diseases on a benefit-cost ratio (BCR) scale. Shapes are used to distinguish between study types while colors distinguish between the different preventive interventions evaluated in the included studies. “random. (field)” represents studies that adopted field trials while “epidemiological” denotes all other study types except experimental studies. “AM Tx” denotes antimicrobial treatment. The position of shapes on the BCR scale denote the profitability of the interventions in controlling the specified diseases of interest in the included studies. “$” in shapes represents the internal rate of return of an intervention in controlling the specified disease for studies that did not present data for BCRs to be calculated