Gender-responsive design opportunities for bacteriophage therapy targeting Salmonella for adoption by Kenyan chicken keepers

Focus group discussions. This research activity on gender and bacteriophages is one of the aims within the research project ‘Phages as a one health approach for the replacement of antibiotics, and reduction of drug resistant nontyphoidal Salmonella, in poultry farms in Kenya’. Bacteriophage (phage)...

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Autores principales: Campbell, Zoe, Njiru, Nelly
Formato: Conjunto de datos
Lenguaje:Inglés
suajili
Publicado: 2026
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180641
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author Campbell, Zoe
Njiru, Nelly
author_browse Campbell, Zoe
Njiru, Nelly
author_facet Campbell, Zoe
Njiru, Nelly
author_sort Campbell, Zoe
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Focus group discussions. This research activity on gender and bacteriophages is one of the aims within the research project ‘Phages as a one health approach for the replacement of antibiotics, and reduction of drug resistant nontyphoidal Salmonella, in poultry farms in Kenya’. Bacteriophage (phage) technology has the potential to prevent and/ or treat fowl typhoid, pullorum disease, and salmonellosis in chickens, kill Salmonella species on surfaces, and prevent food-borne illness caused by Salmonella species in humans. This gender-responsive study considers design opportunities for bacteriophage therapy, a veterinary product under development for the Kenyan context that uses parasitic viruses called bacteriophages (phages) to attack pathogenic Salmonella bacteria responsible for fowl typhoid, salmonellosis, and pullorum in chickens and foodborne illness in people. Bacteriophage technology, if adopted as an alternative and/ or complement to antibiotics to address these health concerns in poultry, could reduce the selective pressures that contribute to the evolution of drug resistant Salmonella. The main goals of the project is to assess the feasibility of adoption of bacteriophage technology by men and women chicken farmers in free-range and semi-intensive production systems in Kenya, and to identify opportunities and barriers to adoption that may vary by gender. The specific objectives are to: 1. Map disease problems, existing solutions, and delivery system preferences to assess the feasibility of adoption of bacteriophages for chicken farmers 2. Identify opportunities and barriers to adoption of bacteriophages that may vary by gender 3. Inform the development of a product that can address the problems of chicken farmers using an appropriate delivery system
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spelling CGSpace1806412026-01-26T13:18:09Z Gender-responsive design opportunities for bacteriophage therapy targeting Salmonella for adoption by Kenyan chicken keepers Campbell, Zoe Njiru, Nelly gender women gender analysis bacterial diseases newcastle disease vaccines antimicrobial resistance chickens veterinary services zoonoses bacteriophages veterinary drugs salmonella salmonellosis pullorum disease chicken Focus group discussions. This research activity on gender and bacteriophages is one of the aims within the research project ‘Phages as a one health approach for the replacement of antibiotics, and reduction of drug resistant nontyphoidal Salmonella, in poultry farms in Kenya’. Bacteriophage (phage) technology has the potential to prevent and/ or treat fowl typhoid, pullorum disease, and salmonellosis in chickens, kill Salmonella species on surfaces, and prevent food-borne illness caused by Salmonella species in humans. This gender-responsive study considers design opportunities for bacteriophage therapy, a veterinary product under development for the Kenyan context that uses parasitic viruses called bacteriophages (phages) to attack pathogenic Salmonella bacteria responsible for fowl typhoid, salmonellosis, and pullorum in chickens and foodborne illness in people. Bacteriophage technology, if adopted as an alternative and/ or complement to antibiotics to address these health concerns in poultry, could reduce the selective pressures that contribute to the evolution of drug resistant Salmonella. The main goals of the project is to assess the feasibility of adoption of bacteriophage technology by men and women chicken farmers in free-range and semi-intensive production systems in Kenya, and to identify opportunities and barriers to adoption that may vary by gender. The specific objectives are to: 1. Map disease problems, existing solutions, and delivery system preferences to assess the feasibility of adoption of bacteriophages for chicken farmers 2. Identify opportunities and barriers to adoption of bacteriophages that may vary by gender 3. Inform the development of a product that can address the problems of chicken farmers using an appropriate delivery system 2026-01-26T13:11:08Z 2026-01-26T13:11:08Z Dataset https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180641 en sw https://hdl.handle.net/10568/119347 Open Access Zoe Campbell, Nelly Njiru. (21/7/2022). Gender-responsive design opportunities for bacteriophage therapy targeting Salmonella for adoption by Kenyan chicken keepers [Survey Data].
spellingShingle gender
women
gender analysis
bacterial diseases
newcastle disease
vaccines
antimicrobial resistance
chickens
veterinary services
zoonoses
bacteriophages
veterinary drugs
salmonella
salmonellosis
pullorum disease
chicken
Campbell, Zoe
Njiru, Nelly
Gender-responsive design opportunities for bacteriophage therapy targeting Salmonella for adoption by Kenyan chicken keepers
title Gender-responsive design opportunities for bacteriophage therapy targeting Salmonella for adoption by Kenyan chicken keepers
title_full Gender-responsive design opportunities for bacteriophage therapy targeting Salmonella for adoption by Kenyan chicken keepers
title_fullStr Gender-responsive design opportunities for bacteriophage therapy targeting Salmonella for adoption by Kenyan chicken keepers
title_full_unstemmed Gender-responsive design opportunities for bacteriophage therapy targeting Salmonella for adoption by Kenyan chicken keepers
title_short Gender-responsive design opportunities for bacteriophage therapy targeting Salmonella for adoption by Kenyan chicken keepers
title_sort gender responsive design opportunities for bacteriophage therapy targeting salmonella for adoption by kenyan chicken keepers
topic gender
women
gender analysis
bacterial diseases
newcastle disease
vaccines
antimicrobial resistance
chickens
veterinary services
zoonoses
bacteriophages
veterinary drugs
salmonella
salmonellosis
pullorum disease
chicken
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180641
work_keys_str_mv AT campbellzoe genderresponsivedesignopportunitiesforbacteriophagetherapytargetingsalmonellaforadoptionbykenyanchickenkeepers
AT njirunelly genderresponsivedesignopportunitiesforbacteriophagetherapytargetingsalmonellaforadoptionbykenyanchickenkeepers