Understanding the food safety and zoonosis risk practices of the beef, sheep and goat Nairobi food systems using value chain analysis

Purpose Beef, sheep and goat food systems are thought to be important sources of pathogens in Nairobi. This study aimed to use value chain (VC) analysis to investigate food safety and zoonotic risk practices of these systems. Methods VC analysis is commonly used to assess market structures yet its potential to investigate food safety and zoonotic risks is unexplored. In a cross-sectional study of people in Nairobi’s beef, sheep and goat food systems (farmers to consumers), data were collected through 75 focus groups and 571 interviews. Data were obtained on movement of people, animals and products (chain mapping), power groups, rules, incentives and enforcement (governance), barriers, distribution of benefits and food safety and zoonoses risk practices. Data were analysed to produce chain profiles and quantify commodity flows and gross margins. Qualitative analysis identified food safety, zoonosis and VC themes. Results Eight chain profiles were identified, with the ‘less integrated terminal markets’ representing three quarters of the city’s ruminant meat supply. Main food safety and zoonotic risk practices related to: water and equipment contamination; poor cold chain; human contact contamination; animal movements; and lack of hygiene. Poor governance enhanced these risks such as: inadequate market business models; enforcement failures; control gaps; and power group pressures. Barriers identified to corrective actions were: lack of infrastructure; limited financial capacity; poor training and services. Furthermore, unequal distribution of benefits in low cost markets provided a negative incentive for the perpetuation of risks. Conclusions This study identified main food safety and zoonoses risk practices, people and VC factors involved in risk-taking activities to help future control programmes in the Nairobi beef, sheep and goat system. Relevance Food safety risks and diseases can be effectively controlled and understood when these are investigated using a food system approach which considers chain governance, barriers and inequalities. The methods used provide a clear guideline and way forward for epidemiologists to investigate these risks using a VC approach.

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Main Authors: Alarcón, Pablo, Muinde, P., Karani, M., Akoko, James M., Fèvre, Eric M., Domínguez Salas, Paula, Kiambi, S., Häsler, Barbara, Rushton, Jonathan
Format: Presentation biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2015-11
Subjects:goats, health, zoonoses,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/72399
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-723992023-09-14T10:05:37Z Understanding the food safety and zoonosis risk practices of the beef, sheep and goat Nairobi food systems using value chain analysis Alarcón, Pablo Muinde, P. Karani, M. Akoko, James M. Fèvre, Eric M. Domínguez Salas, Paula Kiambi, S. Häsler, Barbara Rushton, Jonathan goats health zoonoses Purpose Beef, sheep and goat food systems are thought to be important sources of pathogens in Nairobi. This study aimed to use value chain (VC) analysis to investigate food safety and zoonotic risk practices of these systems. Methods VC analysis is commonly used to assess market structures yet its potential to investigate food safety and zoonotic risks is unexplored. In a cross-sectional study of people in Nairobi’s beef, sheep and goat food systems (farmers to consumers), data were collected through 75 focus groups and 571 interviews. Data were obtained on movement of people, animals and products (chain mapping), power groups, rules, incentives and enforcement (governance), barriers, distribution of benefits and food safety and zoonoses risk practices. Data were analysed to produce chain profiles and quantify commodity flows and gross margins. Qualitative analysis identified food safety, zoonosis and VC themes. Results Eight chain profiles were identified, with the ‘less integrated terminal markets’ representing three quarters of the city’s ruminant meat supply. Main food safety and zoonotic risk practices related to: water and equipment contamination; poor cold chain; human contact contamination; animal movements; and lack of hygiene. Poor governance enhanced these risks such as: inadequate market business models; enforcement failures; control gaps; and power group pressures. Barriers identified to corrective actions were: lack of infrastructure; limited financial capacity; poor training and services. Furthermore, unequal distribution of benefits in low cost markets provided a negative incentive for the perpetuation of risks. Conclusions This study identified main food safety and zoonoses risk practices, people and VC factors involved in risk-taking activities to help future control programmes in the Nairobi beef, sheep and goat system. Relevance Food safety risks and diseases can be effectively controlled and understood when these are investigated using a food system approach which considers chain governance, barriers and inequalities. The methods used provide a clear guideline and way forward for epidemiologists to investigate these risks using a VC approach. 2015-11 2016-03-01T21:14:29Z 2016-03-01T21:14:29Z Presentation Alarcon, P., Muinde, P., Karani, M., Akoko, J., Fèvre, E.M., Dominguez-Salas, P., Kiambi, S., Häsler, B. and Rushton, J. 2015. Understanding the food safety and zoonosis risk practices of the beef, sheep and goat Nairobi food systems using value chain analysis. Presentation at the 14th conference of the International Society for Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics (ISVEE), Merida, Yucatan, Mexico, 3-7 November 2015. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/72399 en Limited Access application/pdf
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 goats
health
zoonoses
goats
health
zoonoses
spellingShingle goats
health
zoonoses
goats
health
zoonoses
Alarcón, Pablo
Muinde, P.
Karani, M.
Akoko, James M.
Fèvre, Eric M.
Domínguez Salas, Paula
Kiambi, S.
Häsler, Barbara
Rushton, Jonathan
Understanding the food safety and zoonosis risk practices of the beef, sheep and goat Nairobi food systems using value chain analysis
description Purpose Beef, sheep and goat food systems are thought to be important sources of pathogens in Nairobi. This study aimed to use value chain (VC) analysis to investigate food safety and zoonotic risk practices of these systems. Methods VC analysis is commonly used to assess market structures yet its potential to investigate food safety and zoonotic risks is unexplored. In a cross-sectional study of people in Nairobi’s beef, sheep and goat food systems (farmers to consumers), data were collected through 75 focus groups and 571 interviews. Data were obtained on movement of people, animals and products (chain mapping), power groups, rules, incentives and enforcement (governance), barriers, distribution of benefits and food safety and zoonoses risk practices. Data were analysed to produce chain profiles and quantify commodity flows and gross margins. Qualitative analysis identified food safety, zoonosis and VC themes. Results Eight chain profiles were identified, with the ‘less integrated terminal markets’ representing three quarters of the city’s ruminant meat supply. Main food safety and zoonotic risk practices related to: water and equipment contamination; poor cold chain; human contact contamination; animal movements; and lack of hygiene. Poor governance enhanced these risks such as: inadequate market business models; enforcement failures; control gaps; and power group pressures. Barriers identified to corrective actions were: lack of infrastructure; limited financial capacity; poor training and services. Furthermore, unequal distribution of benefits in low cost markets provided a negative incentive for the perpetuation of risks. Conclusions This study identified main food safety and zoonoses risk practices, people and VC factors involved in risk-taking activities to help future control programmes in the Nairobi beef, sheep and goat system. Relevance Food safety risks and diseases can be effectively controlled and understood when these are investigated using a food system approach which considers chain governance, barriers and inequalities. The methods used provide a clear guideline and way forward for epidemiologists to investigate these risks using a VC approach.
format Presentation
topic_facet goats
health
zoonoses
author Alarcón, Pablo
Muinde, P.
Karani, M.
Akoko, James M.
Fèvre, Eric M.
Domínguez Salas, Paula
Kiambi, S.
Häsler, Barbara
Rushton, Jonathan
author_facet Alarcón, Pablo
Muinde, P.
Karani, M.
Akoko, James M.
Fèvre, Eric M.
Domínguez Salas, Paula
Kiambi, S.
Häsler, Barbara
Rushton, Jonathan
author_sort Alarcón, Pablo
title Understanding the food safety and zoonosis risk practices of the beef, sheep and goat Nairobi food systems using value chain analysis
title_short Understanding the food safety and zoonosis risk practices of the beef, sheep and goat Nairobi food systems using value chain analysis
title_full Understanding the food safety and zoonosis risk practices of the beef, sheep and goat Nairobi food systems using value chain analysis
title_fullStr Understanding the food safety and zoonosis risk practices of the beef, sheep and goat Nairobi food systems using value chain analysis
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the food safety and zoonosis risk practices of the beef, sheep and goat Nairobi food systems using value chain analysis
title_sort understanding the food safety and zoonosis risk practices of the beef, sheep and goat nairobi food systems using value chain analysis
publishDate 2015-11
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/72399
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