Table 1.
Characteristics of study and non-study districts in Tanzania. Continuous variables are summarised by the mean (range) and categorical variables by the number (%). Variables were either extracted from the national census [16] or from district shapefiles from the Tanzania National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) website [19]. These variables were tested using ordinary least squares regression to assess the best variables for predicting numbers of dogs in districts.
Variable | Study Districts (n = 28) | Non-Study District (n = 140) |
---|---|---|
Human population size | 307,676 (70,209, 1,775,049) | 257,188 (39,242, 807,619) |
Annual human population growth rate (%) | 2.3 (−1.0, 7.0) | 2.6 (−3, 7) |
Number of households | 75,452 (16,892, 441,240) | 50,636 (9027, 134,608) |
Average household size (persons per household) | 4.2 (3.5, 5.5) | 5.1 (3.8, 7.8) |
Area (km2) ¥ | 4375 (15, 28,000) | 4375 (18.6, 28,244) |
Setting: | ||
Inland | 14 (50%) | 128 (91%) |
Coastal ‡ [Island] | 14 (50%) [4 (14%)] | 12 (9%) [6 (4.7%)] |
Number of livestock-keeping households | 18,317 (4771, 35,829) | 24,168 (2258, 71,335) |
Proportion (%) of persons employed * as: | ||
Peasants | 60 (3, 88) | 64 (4, 93) |
Livestock keepers | 1 (0, 6) | 1 (0, 65) |
¥ Excluding protected areas and water bodies; ‡ Coastal districts were defined as districts that border the Indian ocean; * Defined as the main occupation on which persons aged 10 years and above spend most of their working time.