Development and validation of animal welfare knowledge, attitude, and practice assessment tool among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia

Objective: To develop and validate an assessment tool to measure knowledge, attitude, and practice (KAP) towards animal welfare among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia. Materials and methods: This study was conducted among smallholder crop-livestock farmers and pastoralists in four districts of Ethio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ayalew, Gezahegn, Berhe, Tsega, Mekonnen, Mesfin, Gelan, Eyob, Wieland, Barbara, Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D., Doyle, Rebecca
Format: Poster
Language:Inglés
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140757
_version_ 1855527019116232704
author Ayalew, Gezahegn
Berhe, Tsega
Mekonnen, Mesfin
Gelan, Eyob
Wieland, Barbara
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Doyle, Rebecca
author_browse Ayalew, Gezahegn
Berhe, Tsega
Doyle, Rebecca
Gelan, Eyob
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Mekonnen, Mesfin
Wieland, Barbara
author_facet Ayalew, Gezahegn
Berhe, Tsega
Mekonnen, Mesfin
Gelan, Eyob
Wieland, Barbara
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Doyle, Rebecca
author_sort Ayalew, Gezahegn
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Objective: To develop and validate an assessment tool to measure knowledge, attitude, and practice (KAP) towards animal welfare among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia. Materials and methods: This study was conducted among smallholder crop-livestock farmers and pastoralists in four districts of Ethiopia. The KAP questions covered a range of species and welfare topics including health and nutrition, resource availability, and behavioral and mental state dimensions of animal welfare. Item response theory models were fitted to the data from reliable items to estimate the probability of correctly answering an item as a function of the respondents’ KAP level. Graphs depicting the discriminating ability and precision of an item across different levels of the latent trait were plotted. Results: A total of 197 respondents provided information on the set of 34 animal welfare KAP items. Overall, the highest correct mean score was recorded for the attitude section (77%) and the lowest was recorded for practice (25%). From the evaluation, the majority of the items from the Animal welfare KAP fit well with the scale. The discriminating ability of the scales was varied across the latent ability of the respondents. The knowledge and practice scale did well at identifying smallholder farmers with average and above-average trait levels while the attitude scale did well at discriminating between smallholder farmers with average and below-average trait levels. Crop-livestock farmers had a better animal welfare knowledge level than pastoralists (P<0.001). Many of the items in the knowledge section responded differently between crop-livestock farmers and pastoralists which shows the lack of an equal understanding of animal welfare among these groups. Conclusion: The developed questionnaire had a satisfactory psychometric property for measuring animal welfare KAP in Ethiopian smallholder farmers. This tool will be used to measure the impact of current and future intervention.
format Poster
id CGSpace140757
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1407572025-11-04T17:35:21Z Development and validation of animal welfare knowledge, attitude, and practice assessment tool among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia Ayalew, Gezahegn Berhe, Tsega Mekonnen, Mesfin Gelan, Eyob Wieland, Barbara Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D. Doyle, Rebecca animal production animal welfare Objective: To develop and validate an assessment tool to measure knowledge, attitude, and practice (KAP) towards animal welfare among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia. Materials and methods: This study was conducted among smallholder crop-livestock farmers and pastoralists in four districts of Ethiopia. The KAP questions covered a range of species and welfare topics including health and nutrition, resource availability, and behavioral and mental state dimensions of animal welfare. Item response theory models were fitted to the data from reliable items to estimate the probability of correctly answering an item as a function of the respondents’ KAP level. Graphs depicting the discriminating ability and precision of an item across different levels of the latent trait were plotted. Results: A total of 197 respondents provided information on the set of 34 animal welfare KAP items. Overall, the highest correct mean score was recorded for the attitude section (77%) and the lowest was recorded for practice (25%). From the evaluation, the majority of the items from the Animal welfare KAP fit well with the scale. The discriminating ability of the scales was varied across the latent ability of the respondents. The knowledge and practice scale did well at identifying smallholder farmers with average and above-average trait levels while the attitude scale did well at discriminating between smallholder farmers with average and below-average trait levels. Crop-livestock farmers had a better animal welfare knowledge level than pastoralists (P<0.001). Many of the items in the knowledge section responded differently between crop-livestock farmers and pastoralists which shows the lack of an equal understanding of animal welfare among these groups. Conclusion: The developed questionnaire had a satisfactory psychometric property for measuring animal welfare KAP in Ethiopian smallholder farmers. This tool will be used to measure the impact of current and future intervention. 2022-08 2024-04-05T08:50:31Z 2024-04-05T08:50:31Z Poster https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140757 en Open Access application/pdf Ayalew, G.A., Berhe, T., Mekonnen, M., Gelan, E., Wieland, B., Knight-Jones, T. and Doyle R. 2022. Development and validation of animal welfare knowledge, attitude, and practice assessment tool among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia. Poster presented at the 16th International Symposium of Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics, Halifax, Canada, 8 August 2022. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle animal production
animal welfare
Ayalew, Gezahegn
Berhe, Tsega
Mekonnen, Mesfin
Gelan, Eyob
Wieland, Barbara
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Doyle, Rebecca
Development and validation of animal welfare knowledge, attitude, and practice assessment tool among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia
title Development and validation of animal welfare knowledge, attitude, and practice assessment tool among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia
title_full Development and validation of animal welfare knowledge, attitude, and practice assessment tool among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Development and validation of animal welfare knowledge, attitude, and practice assessment tool among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Development and validation of animal welfare knowledge, attitude, and practice assessment tool among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia
title_short Development and validation of animal welfare knowledge, attitude, and practice assessment tool among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia
title_sort development and validation of animal welfare knowledge attitude and practice assessment tool among smallholder farmers in ethiopia
topic animal production
animal welfare
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/140757
work_keys_str_mv AT ayalewgezahegn developmentandvalidationofanimalwelfareknowledgeattitudeandpracticeassessmenttoolamongsmallholderfarmersinethiopia
AT berhetsega developmentandvalidationofanimalwelfareknowledgeattitudeandpracticeassessmenttoolamongsmallholderfarmersinethiopia
AT mekonnenmesfin developmentandvalidationofanimalwelfareknowledgeattitudeandpracticeassessmenttoolamongsmallholderfarmersinethiopia
AT gelaneyob developmentandvalidationofanimalwelfareknowledgeattitudeandpracticeassessmenttoolamongsmallholderfarmersinethiopia
AT wielandbarbara developmentandvalidationofanimalwelfareknowledgeattitudeandpracticeassessmenttoolamongsmallholderfarmersinethiopia
AT knightjonestheodorejd developmentandvalidationofanimalwelfareknowledgeattitudeandpracticeassessmenttoolamongsmallholderfarmersinethiopia
AT doylerebecca developmentandvalidationofanimalwelfareknowledgeattitudeandpracticeassessmenttoolamongsmallholderfarmersinethiopia