Mapping the benefit-cost ratios of interventions against bovine trypanosomosis in Eastern Africa

This study builds upon earlier work mapping the potential benefits from bovine trypanosomosis control and analysing the costs of different approaches. Updated costs were derived for five intervention techniques: trypanocides, targets, insecticide-treated cattle, aerial spraying and the release of st...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shaw, A.P.M., Wint, G.R.W., Cecchi, G., Torr, S.J., Mattioli, R.C., Robinson, Timothy P.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/67149
_version_ 1855534918862372864
author Shaw, A.P.M.
Wint, G.R.W.
Cecchi, G.
Torr, S.J.
Mattioli, R.C.
Robinson, Timothy P.
author_browse Cecchi, G.
Mattioli, R.C.
Robinson, Timothy P.
Shaw, A.P.M.
Torr, S.J.
Wint, G.R.W.
author_facet Shaw, A.P.M.
Wint, G.R.W.
Cecchi, G.
Torr, S.J.
Mattioli, R.C.
Robinson, Timothy P.
author_sort Shaw, A.P.M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This study builds upon earlier work mapping the potential benefits from bovine trypanosomosis control and analysing the costs of different approaches. Updated costs were derived for five intervention techniques: trypanocides, targets, insecticide-treated cattle, aerial spraying and the release of sterile males. Two strategies were considered: continuous control and elimination. For mapping the costs, cattle densities, environmental constraints, and the presence of savannah or riverine tsetse species were taken into account. These were combined with maps of potential benefits to produce maps of benefit-cost ratios. The results illustrate a diverse picture, and they clearly indicate that no single technique or strategy is universally profitable. For control using trypanocide prophylaxis, returns are modest, even without accounting for the risk of drug resistance but, in areas of low cattle densities, this is the only approach that yields a positive return. Where cattle densities are sufficient to support it, the use of insecticide-treated cattle stands out as the most consistently profitable technique, widely achieving benefit-cost ratios above 5. In parts of the high-potential areas such as the mixed farming, high-oxen-use zones of western Ethiopia, the fertile crescent north of Lake Victoria and the dairy production areas in western and central Kenya, all tsetse control strategies achieve benefit-cost ratios from 2 to over 15, and for elimination strategies, ratios from 5 to over 20. By contrast, in some areas, notably where cattle densities are below 20 per km2, the costs of interventions against tsetse match or even outweigh the benefits, especially for control scenarios using aerial spraying or the deployment of targets where both savannah and riverine flies are present. If the burden of human African trypanosomosis were factored in, the benefit-cost ratios of some of the low-return areas would be considerably increased. Comparatively, elimination strategies give rise to higher benefit-cost ratios than do those for continuous control. However, the costs calculated for elimination assume problem-free, large scale operations, and they rest on the outputs of entomological models that are difficult to validate in the field. Experience indicates that the conditions underlying successful and sustained elimination campaigns are seldom met. By choosing the most appropriate thresholds for benefit-cost ratios, decision-makers and planners can use the maps to define strategies, assist in prioritising areas for intervention, and help choose among intervention techniques and approaches. The methodology would have wider applicability in analysing other disease constraints with a strong spatial component.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace67149
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace671492025-11-12T04:29:45Z Mapping the benefit-cost ratios of interventions against bovine trypanosomosis in Eastern Africa Shaw, A.P.M. Wint, G.R.W. Cecchi, G. Torr, S.J. Mattioli, R.C. Robinson, Timothy P. animal diseases disease control This study builds upon earlier work mapping the potential benefits from bovine trypanosomosis control and analysing the costs of different approaches. Updated costs were derived for five intervention techniques: trypanocides, targets, insecticide-treated cattle, aerial spraying and the release of sterile males. Two strategies were considered: continuous control and elimination. For mapping the costs, cattle densities, environmental constraints, and the presence of savannah or riverine tsetse species were taken into account. These were combined with maps of potential benefits to produce maps of benefit-cost ratios. The results illustrate a diverse picture, and they clearly indicate that no single technique or strategy is universally profitable. For control using trypanocide prophylaxis, returns are modest, even without accounting for the risk of drug resistance but, in areas of low cattle densities, this is the only approach that yields a positive return. Where cattle densities are sufficient to support it, the use of insecticide-treated cattle stands out as the most consistently profitable technique, widely achieving benefit-cost ratios above 5. In parts of the high-potential areas such as the mixed farming, high-oxen-use zones of western Ethiopia, the fertile crescent north of Lake Victoria and the dairy production areas in western and central Kenya, all tsetse control strategies achieve benefit-cost ratios from 2 to over 15, and for elimination strategies, ratios from 5 to over 20. By contrast, in some areas, notably where cattle densities are below 20 per km2, the costs of interventions against tsetse match or even outweigh the benefits, especially for control scenarios using aerial spraying or the deployment of targets where both savannah and riverine flies are present. If the burden of human African trypanosomosis were factored in, the benefit-cost ratios of some of the low-return areas would be considerably increased. Comparatively, elimination strategies give rise to higher benefit-cost ratios than do those for continuous control. However, the costs calculated for elimination assume problem-free, large scale operations, and they rest on the outputs of entomological models that are difficult to validate in the field. Experience indicates that the conditions underlying successful and sustained elimination campaigns are seldom met. By choosing the most appropriate thresholds for benefit-cost ratios, decision-makers and planners can use the maps to define strategies, assist in prioritising areas for intervention, and help choose among intervention techniques and approaches. The methodology would have wider applicability in analysing other disease constraints with a strong spatial component. 2015-12 2015-06-24T08:19:54Z 2015-06-24T08:19:54Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/67149 en Open Access application/pdf Elsevier Shaw, A.P.M., Wint, G.R.W., Cecchi, G., Torr, S.J., Mattioli, R.C. and Robinson, T.P. 2015. Mapping the benefit-cost ratios of interventions against bovine trypanosomosis in Eastern Africa. Preventive Veterinary Medicine 122(4): 406-416.
spellingShingle animal diseases
disease control
Shaw, A.P.M.
Wint, G.R.W.
Cecchi, G.
Torr, S.J.
Mattioli, R.C.
Robinson, Timothy P.
Mapping the benefit-cost ratios of interventions against bovine trypanosomosis in Eastern Africa
title Mapping the benefit-cost ratios of interventions against bovine trypanosomosis in Eastern Africa
title_full Mapping the benefit-cost ratios of interventions against bovine trypanosomosis in Eastern Africa
title_fullStr Mapping the benefit-cost ratios of interventions against bovine trypanosomosis in Eastern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Mapping the benefit-cost ratios of interventions against bovine trypanosomosis in Eastern Africa
title_short Mapping the benefit-cost ratios of interventions against bovine trypanosomosis in Eastern Africa
title_sort mapping the benefit cost ratios of interventions against bovine trypanosomosis in eastern africa
topic animal diseases
disease control
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/67149
work_keys_str_mv AT shawapm mappingthebenefitcostratiosofinterventionsagainstbovinetrypanosomosisineasternafrica
AT wintgrw mappingthebenefitcostratiosofinterventionsagainstbovinetrypanosomosisineasternafrica
AT cecchig mappingthebenefitcostratiosofinterventionsagainstbovinetrypanosomosisineasternafrica
AT torrsj mappingthebenefitcostratiosofinterventionsagainstbovinetrypanosomosisineasternafrica
AT mattiolirc mappingthebenefitcostratiosofinterventionsagainstbovinetrypanosomosisineasternafrica
AT robinsontimothyp mappingthebenefitcostratiosofinterventionsagainstbovinetrypanosomosisineasternafrica