More sensitisation to communities
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Education can address the many information gaps in disease transmission, the rationale for pyrethroid use and improve application strategies
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Sensitisation has been on-going sporadically since 1998. Requires long-term engagement through repeated campaigns to significantly alter behaviour
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The nature of poverty in a subsistence-level economy will mean that the cheapest product will attract the most support
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Creation of village bylaws
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Creates collective ownership and a locally agreed enforcement strategy
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Difficult to implement and sustain since the region is still recovering from decades of conflict and economic marginalisation
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Most communities are not willing or able to enforce spraying routines collectively
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Encouragement of private sprayers
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Increases supply of pyrethroids through the private market
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Services are available in many areas but face challenges since farmers spray at different intervals
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Cattle can be organised every month for village-wide spraying
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People support mass cattle treatments if they are free of charge or subsidised
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Strengthens access to veterinary services
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Sprayer groups, such as those established through SOS, require incentives to reach the poorest communities and to make spray services a viable business as selling other veterinary services to farmers is seen to be more lucrative
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Provides local skills development and employment
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Cultivation of community spray groups
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Group motivation facilitates compliance
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Has been used in the past with little success
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Government/NGOs provide initial free inputs
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Groups often fall apart due to insufficient local ownership
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Rehabilitation of dips
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Transfer of responsibility to government
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Population density prevents/deters farmers from the movement of cattle
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Regular full body wash
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User fees do not have local support
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People would rather spray according to their own schedule
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Subsidise pyrethroid products
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Equalises the perceived discrepancy in price (ml for ml) between pyrethroids and amitraz compounds
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Requires continued outside financial support from public or private bodies
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Removal or alteration of subsidy can become a barrier to uptake and adoption
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Educate veterinary shops and animal health workers
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Relatively quick and can improve the skills of animal health workers
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Shop owners and animal health workers already understand the benefits of pyrethroids but stock amitraz to meet customer demand
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Government restriction of amitraz acaricides
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Fastest solution that would avoid difficulties of facilitating behaviour change from farmers
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In a liberalised economy, market restriction requires support from the central government, which could take a long time
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Informal regulation of the market |
Avoids the need for behaviour change and engaging in formal policy change |
Requires political will at the district level |