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Contagious Bovine Pleuropneumonia: The Costs of Control in Central/Southern Africa
28
Citations
4
References
1998
Year
MalariaInfection ControlPublic HealthAnimal Health EconomicsDisease EmergenceMycoplasma Mycoides SubspeciesVeterinary EpidemiologyEpidemiologyVaccinationContagious Bovine PleuropneumoniaAnimal ScienceGlobal HealthZoonotic DiseaseInternational HealthVeterinary ScienceM. MycoidesDisease TransmissionAnimal Disease PreventionMedicine
Contagious bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP) caused by Mycoplasma mycoides subspecies mycoides small colony (M. mycoides) has been endemic in many parts of Africa for the greater part of this century. Because of an international vaccination campaign the disease was almost eliminated from the continent. With the deteriorating economic situation of many countries, vaccination programs have been allowed to slip; drought conditions have resulted in great movements of livestock and the disease has spread rapidly to the east and south. For Government Veterinary Departments, the implications of this resurgence of CBPP, are serious. The costs threaten to overwhelm completely under-funded government, services. Where cost-recovery measures are introduced, the charging for vaccines may damage rapport with communities and erode the credibility of the government services. Farmers may find the loss of cattle and the costs of vaccine severe burdens which threaten their livelihoods and social well-being (Zambia) and even, in extreme cases, their survival (Botswana). Controlling the disease today presents new possibilities which include increased cross-border collaboration (Malawi/Tanzania), increased emphasis on monitoring (N. Zambia) and the greater involvement of communities in disease control (W. Zambia).
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