期刊
TRANSBOUNDARY AND EMERGING DISEASES
卷 69, 期 5, 页码 2573-2587出版社
WILEY-HINDAWI
DOI: 10.1111/tbed.14407
关键词
biosecurity; disease reporting; farmer behaviour; infectious disease; veterinary behaviour
资金
- Ministry for Primary Industries, New Zealand
Understanding the sociocultural factors influencing individuals' willingness to report emerging disease outbreaks is crucial, and various research methodologies have been utilized for this purpose. Challenges exist in accurately capturing behavioral intentions and actions, and there is a need for methodological innovations to bridge the gap between reported behavior and actual behavior. Future research should focus on specific interventions and clarify the relationships between disease contexts, behavioral mechanisms, and outcomes for a more informed understanding of disease reporting.
Voluntary detection of emerging disease outbreaks is considered essential for limiting their potential impacts on livestock industries. However, many of the strategies employed by animal health authorities to capture data on potential emerging disease threats rely on farmers and veterinarians identifying situations of concern and then voluntarily taking appropriate actions to notify animal health authorities. To improve the performance of these systems, it is important to understand the range of socio-cultural factors influencing the willingness of individuals to engage with disease reporting such as trust in government, perceived economic impacts, social stigma and perceptions of 'good farming'. The objectives of this systematic review were to assess how different social research methodologies have been employed to understand the role these socio-cultural dimensions play in voluntary disease reporting and to discuss limitations to address in future research. The review uncovered 39 relevant publications that employed a range of quantitative and qualitative methodologies including surveys, interviews, focus groups, scenarios, observations, mixed-methods, interventions and secondary data analysis. While these studies provided valuable insights, one significant challenge remains eliciting accurate statements of behaviour and intentions rather than those that reflect desirable social norms. There is scope to develop methodological innovations to study the decision to report animal disease to help overcome the gap between what people say they do and their observable behaviour. A notable absence is studies exploring specific interventions designed to encourage disease reporting. Greater clarity in specifying the disease contexts, behavioural mechanisms and outcomes and the relationships between them would provide a more theoretically informed and policy relevant understanding of how disease reporting works, for which farmers, and in which disease contexts.
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