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Spatial and temporal risk as drivers for adoption of foot and mouth disease vaccination.

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dc.creator Railey, Ashley F
dc.creator Lembo, Tiziana
dc.creator Palmer, Guy H
dc.creator Marsh, Thomas L
dc.creator Shirima, Gabriel M.
dc.date 2020-03-27T10:08:45Z
dc.date 2020-03-27T10:08:45Z
dc.date 2018-08-09
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T09:20:29Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T09:20:29Z
dc.identifier https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2018.06.069
dc.identifier https://dspace.nm-aist.ac.tz/handle/20.500.12479/678
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/94988
dc.description This research article published by Elsevier Ltd., 2018
dc.description Identifying the drivers of vaccine adoption decisions under varying levels of perceived disease risk and benefit provides insight into what can limit or enhance vaccination uptake. To address the relationship of perceived benefit relative to temporal and spatial risk, we surveyed 432 pastoralist households in northern Tanzania on vaccination for foot-and-mouth disease (FMD). Unlike human health vaccination decisions where beliefs regarding adverse, personal health effects factor heavily into perceived risk, decisions for animal vaccination focus disproportionately on dynamic risks to animal productivity. We extended a commonly used stated preference survey methodology, willingness to pay, to elicit responses for a routine vaccination strategy applied biannually and an emergency strategy applied in reaction to spatially variable, hypothetical outbreaks. Our results show that households place a higher value on vaccination as perceived risk and household capacity to cope with resource constraints increase, but that the episodic and unpredictable spatial and temporal spread of FMD contributes to increased levels of uncertainty regarding the benefit of vaccination. In addition, concerns regarding the performance of the vaccine underlie decisions for both routine and emergency vaccination, indicating a need for within community messaging and documentation of the household and population level benefits of FMD vaccination.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher Elsevier Ltd.
dc.subject Foot-and-mouth disease
dc.subject Perceived risk
dc.subject Spatial risk
dc.subject Temporal risk
dc.subject Uncertainty
dc.subject Vaccination
dc.title Spatial and temporal risk as drivers for adoption of foot and mouth disease vaccination.
dc.type Article


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