Assessing animal health delivery for tick and tick-borne disease control in smallholder dairy systems of Kenya an application of new institutional economics /
Abstract (Summary)
This thesis describes a two-component study undertaken in smallholder dairy
systems of Central Kenya. One component characterized delivery systems for tick
and tick-borne disease (TTBD) technologies including treatment packages, tick
control products and vaccines, while the second component evaluated the important
factors in their utilization by farmers. A combination of two economic analytical tools
was used for the characterisation component. The first, the structure-conductperformance
(SCP) framework, was used to evaluate the performance of marketing
systems and compare it to a perfectly competitive model, and the second, the new
institutional economics (NIE) framework, was used to analyse the role of transaction
costs in the delivery of products and services and their access by farmers. A probit
model was applied to identify the specific factors that farmers consider in their
choices of animal health services. Recommendations were made for the optimal
pathways to deliver East Coast fever vaccines to smallholder farmers.
The study was conducted in three phases. The first phase involved a crosssectional
survey of 344 smallholder dairy farmers in the central highlands of Kenya,
using a structured questionnaire. These farms were selected on a gradient of market
access, with high, medium and low market access represented by Kiambu, Nakuru
and Nyandarua districts, respectively. The second phase involved an exhaustive
survey of all service providers delivering animal health services in the study areas.
The third phase involved working backwards through the marketing chain to the
distributors and suppliers of technologies, as well as interviewing key informants at
policy and institutional levels.
Delivery of TTBD products and services was found to be highly competitive, mostly
carried out by paravets (35% of the total) and stores (33%), particularly in rural areas.
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University of Pretoria etd – Ndung’u, L W (2005)
Vets (18%) had a higher distribution in peri-urban areas, and their limited distribution
in rural areas raised the transaction costs associated with rural farmers’ search and
screening for high quality services. There were no formal regulatory bodies
supervising the quality of the products and services being supplied to farmers and no
state restrictions existed on the type of service providers selling tick control products.
Although pyrethrines (pour-ons) were only permitted for tsetse control, they were
freely being sold to farmers for tick control. A live vaccine, the infection and
treatment method (ITM) for ECF immunization, was available in the country but its
sale was restricted to a single site, the Kenya Coast. Thus, this vaccine was not
available in the study areas. The study identified three key problems that require
specific policy intervention: i) poor access of services and products by farmers, with
an undefined role of paravets who are presently under-utilized, ii) information
asymmetries among farmers and the need to enforce service quality control of
products and services, iii) lack of voice among smallholder farmers with no leverage
for compensations in cases where they receive poor or inappropriate services.
Several transaction costs were identified as constraining the utilization of animal
health services by farmers, and ranged from information, through negotiation to
monitoring costs. Farmers considered the ethnicity and the service quality (as
determined by past performance) of the nearest service provider as important in their
choices, and the density of service providers over a given radius around each farm
as well as travel time to a service provider were crucial determinants in farmer
decision-making.
Using a combination of economic and epidemiological approaches, the study
assessed supply and demand issues associated with delivery pathways for ECF
vaccines among smallholder farmers. The supply-side component involved
evaluating transaction costs associated with two ECF vaccines; ITM and a sub-unit
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University of Pretoria etd – Ndung’u, L W (2005)
vaccine under development, and identifying the appropriate role of public and private
sector in delivery. The main constraints associated with ECF vaccine delivery and
requiring appropriate policies included high information asymmetries faced by
farmers, lack of appropriate quality control and limited accessibility to products and
services by farmers. On the demand side, ECF risk was found to vary with cattle
production systems and agro-ecology. Potential demand for vaccines was found to
be high in both Nyandarua and Nakuru districts and relatively low in Kiambu, where
zero-grazing reduces risk substantially. The study recommends utilization of
paravets for ECF vaccine delivery as an effective means of reducing transaction
costs by increasing service penetration especially in rural areas where the density of
veterinarians tends to be low.
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University of Pretoria etd – Ndung’u, L W (2005)
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:University of Pretoria/Universiteit van Pretoria
School Location:South Africa
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:veterinary parasitology animal health dairy cattle kenya
ISBN:
Date of Publication: