Evidence of improper usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in Maasailand, Kenya

The extent of farm-level extra-label drug use in Kenya is not well documented in spite of its important implications on food safety, human health and international trade. One hundred and thirteen farmers in Kajiado and Narok districts were interviewed between October 2005 and February 2006 using a pre-tested questionnaire. The aim was to gather information on farmers’ veterinary drug use practices at the farm level. Descriptive and regression analyses were undertaken on the data. There was a high level of extra-label usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in the two study areas. Specifically, farmers used lower than recommended doses of all available trypanocides in all classes of cattle except in adult bulls where they overdosed with Veriben®, Novidium® and Tryzan®. Adamycin®, the most commonly used antibiotic in the two study sites, was underdosed at all concentrations in all classes of cattle. Except for Novidium® which farmers dissolved correctly, farmers in the two study sites used less than the recommended volume of water to prepare trypanocidal drugs. Farmers also used less than the recommended strength of acaricides for tick control, except for Dominex®. They also sprayed more cattle at each acaricide strength than the number recommended by the manufacturers. The propensity to use veterinary drugs correctly was positively correlated with farmer’s age and district of origin (p<0.1), but negatively associated with years of formal education of the household head (p<0.05). Policy suggestions are made based on the results.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Irungu, P., Bett, Bernard K., Mbogoh, S.G., Nyamwaro, Sospeter S., Murilla, G.A., Randolph, Thomas F.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:veterinary medicine, cattle, animal health,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/4728
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-47282023-05-10T13:05:49Z Evidence of improper usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in Maasailand, Kenya Irungu, P. Bett, Bernard K. Mbogoh, S.G. Nyamwaro, Sospeter S. Murilla, G.A. Randolph, Thomas F. veterinary medicine cattle animal health The extent of farm-level extra-label drug use in Kenya is not well documented in spite of its important implications on food safety, human health and international trade. One hundred and thirteen farmers in Kajiado and Narok districts were interviewed between October 2005 and February 2006 using a pre-tested questionnaire. The aim was to gather information on farmers’ veterinary drug use practices at the farm level. Descriptive and regression analyses were undertaken on the data. There was a high level of extra-label usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in the two study areas. Specifically, farmers used lower than recommended doses of all available trypanocides in all classes of cattle except in adult bulls where they overdosed with Veriben®, Novidium® and Tryzan®. Adamycin®, the most commonly used antibiotic in the two study sites, was underdosed at all concentrations in all classes of cattle. Except for Novidium® which farmers dissolved correctly, farmers in the two study sites used less than the recommended volume of water to prepare trypanocidal drugs. Farmers also used less than the recommended strength of acaricides for tick control, except for Dominex®. They also sprayed more cattle at each acaricide strength than the number recommended by the manufacturers. The propensity to use veterinary drugs correctly was positively correlated with farmer’s age and district of origin (p<0.1), but negatively associated with years of formal education of the household head (p<0.05). Policy suggestions are made based on the results. 2007 2011-07-21T07:39:01Z 2011-07-21T07:39:01Z Journal Article Irungu, P., Bett, B., Mbogoh, S.G., Nyamwaro, S.O., Murilla, G.A. and Randolph, T. 2007. Evidence of improper usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in Maasailand, Kenya. Bulletin of Animal Health and Production in Africa. 55(4):210-225 0378-9721 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/4728 en Limited Access p. 210-225 Bulletin of Animal Health and Production in Africa
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic veterinary medicine
cattle
animal health
veterinary medicine
cattle
animal health
spellingShingle veterinary medicine
cattle
animal health
veterinary medicine
cattle
animal health
Irungu, P.
Bett, Bernard K.
Mbogoh, S.G.
Nyamwaro, Sospeter S.
Murilla, G.A.
Randolph, Thomas F.
Evidence of improper usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in Maasailand, Kenya
description The extent of farm-level extra-label drug use in Kenya is not well documented in spite of its important implications on food safety, human health and international trade. One hundred and thirteen farmers in Kajiado and Narok districts were interviewed between October 2005 and February 2006 using a pre-tested questionnaire. The aim was to gather information on farmers’ veterinary drug use practices at the farm level. Descriptive and regression analyses were undertaken on the data. There was a high level of extra-label usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in the two study areas. Specifically, farmers used lower than recommended doses of all available trypanocides in all classes of cattle except in adult bulls where they overdosed with Veriben®, Novidium® and Tryzan®. Adamycin®, the most commonly used antibiotic in the two study sites, was underdosed at all concentrations in all classes of cattle. Except for Novidium® which farmers dissolved correctly, farmers in the two study sites used less than the recommended volume of water to prepare trypanocidal drugs. Farmers also used less than the recommended strength of acaricides for tick control, except for Dominex®. They also sprayed more cattle at each acaricide strength than the number recommended by the manufacturers. The propensity to use veterinary drugs correctly was positively correlated with farmer’s age and district of origin (p<0.1), but negatively associated with years of formal education of the household head (p<0.05). Policy suggestions are made based on the results.
format Journal Article
topic_facet veterinary medicine
cattle
animal health
author Irungu, P.
Bett, Bernard K.
Mbogoh, S.G.
Nyamwaro, Sospeter S.
Murilla, G.A.
Randolph, Thomas F.
author_facet Irungu, P.
Bett, Bernard K.
Mbogoh, S.G.
Nyamwaro, Sospeter S.
Murilla, G.A.
Randolph, Thomas F.
author_sort Irungu, P.
title Evidence of improper usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in Maasailand, Kenya
title_short Evidence of improper usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in Maasailand, Kenya
title_full Evidence of improper usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in Maasailand, Kenya
title_fullStr Evidence of improper usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in Maasailand, Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Evidence of improper usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in Maasailand, Kenya
title_sort evidence of improper usage of veterinary drugs in cattle in maasailand, kenya
publishDate 2007
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/4728
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