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Willingness to vaccinate and willingness to pay for vaccination against peste des petits ruminants in northern Senegal

This study was carried out in Linguere department, Louga region of Senegal. Its objective was to explore the socio-economic factors that influence small ruminant producers' decisions on vaccination against peste des petits ruminants. We carried out a willingness to vaccinate and willingness to...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Frontiers in veterinary science 2024-06, Vol.11, p.1405073
Main Authors: Ilboudo, Guy Sidwatta, Wanyoike, Francis, Bahta, Sirak, Sy, Samba, Djigo, Cheikh Ahmed Tidiane, Sall, Papa Anoune, Lô, Mamadou Moustapha, Dione, Michel
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Language:English
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Summary:This study was carried out in Linguere department, Louga region of Senegal. Its objective was to explore the socio-economic factors that influence small ruminant producers' decisions on vaccination against peste des petits ruminants. We carried out a willingness to vaccinate and willingness to pay for vaccination using a choice experiment approach with 200 small ruminant producers. Results showed that the key factors that influence willingness to vaccinate, include perceived benefits of vaccination (98, 95%CI: 96-100%), the type of vaccinator (91, 95%CI: 87-95%), the access to information (86, 95%CI: 81-91%), the vaccine availability (80, 95%CI: 74-86%), and the possession of a vaccination certificate by the producer (76, 95%CI: 70-82%). Preferences of producers leaned toward home vaccination (preference weight = 0.74,  = 1%), individual herd vaccination (preference weight = 0.45,  = 1%), elective participation to vaccination (preference weight = 0.33,  = 0.01), and low-cost services (preference weight = -0.004,  = 0.1). Producers expressed a willingness to pay for vaccination per animal of XOF 184 (USD 0.3), XOF 113 (USD 0.18), and XOF 82 (USD 0.13) for home, individual herd, and elective vaccination, respectively. The findings underscore the importance of targeted awareness campaigns and bringing vaccination services closer to the producers.
ISSN:2297-1769
2297-1769
DOI:10.3389/fvets.2024.1405073