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Elsevier, The Veterinary Journal, 2(204), p. 179-185, 2015

DOI: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2015.02.022

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Stakeholder opinions on the practicality of management interventions to control bovine tuberculosis

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This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Livestock disease control strategies are usually determined at national and international levels, yet their successful implementation is determined by stakeholders operating at local scales. Such stakeholders may also have detailed knowledge that would contribute to the development of disease control options suited to the socio-cultural and environmental conditions where management is undertaken. The aim of this study was to evaluate stakeholders' opinions of a list of potential bovine tuberculosis (TB) management interventions for South Central Spain. This area has high TB prevalence in wildlife and livestock, so veterinarians, livestock farmers and hunters are all key stakeholders in TB management. A literature review identified possible management activities. The effectiveness of each intervention was ranked by local experts, and practicality was ranked by hunters, cattle farmers and veterinarians, using a best-worst scaling exercise as part of a questionnaire. The most effective intervention, the banning of supplemental feeding of game species, was not considered practical by stakeholders. The most effective and practical interventions were the separation of wildlife and livestock access to waterholes, testing cattle every 3 months on farms with a recent positive TB case and removing gut-piles from the land after hunting events. Although all three of these options were well supported, each stakeholder group supported different approaches more strongly, suggesting that it might be effective to promote different disease management contributions in different stakeholder communities. This integrated approach contributes to the identification of the optimum combination of management tools that can be delivered effectively. ; Catherine Cowie was supported by a UK NERC/ESRC interdisciplinary studentship. This is a contribution to EU FP7 grant WildTBVac, and MINECO Plan Nacional grants AGL2010-20730 and AGL2011-30041, and FEDER. ; Peer Reviewed