Considering behaviour to ensure the success of a disease control strategy

The success or failure of a disease control strategy can be significantly affected by the behaviour of individual agents involved, influencing the effectiveness of disease control, its cost and sustainability. This behaviour has rarely been considered in agricultural systems, where there is signific...

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Main Authors: Christopher Finn McQuaid, Christopher Aidan Gilligan, Frank van den Bosch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2017-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170721
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spelling doaj-e42f7be7676c4fa5a3dd0976615cb2492020-11-25T04:07:54ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032017-01-0141210.1098/rsos.170721170721Considering behaviour to ensure the success of a disease control strategyChristopher Finn McQuaidChristopher Aidan GilliganFrank van den BoschThe success or failure of a disease control strategy can be significantly affected by the behaviour of individual agents involved, influencing the effectiveness of disease control, its cost and sustainability. This behaviour has rarely been considered in agricultural systems, where there is significant opportunity for impact. Efforts to increase the adoption of control while decreasing oscillations in adoption and yield, particularly through the administration of subsidies, could increase the effectiveness of interventions. We study individual behaviour for the deployment of clean seed systems to control cassava brown streak disease in East Africa, noting that high disease pressure is important to stimulate grower demand of the control strategy. We show that it is not necessary to invest heavily in formal promotional or educational campaigns, as word-of-mouth is often sufficient to endorse the system. At the same time, for improved planting material to have an impact on increasing yields, it needs to be of a sufficient standard to restrict epidemic spread significantly. Finally, even a simple subsidy of clean planting material may be effective in disease control, as well as reducing oscillations in adoption, as long as it reaches a range of different users every season.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170721behavioural modelclean seed systemcassava brown streak
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christopher Finn McQuaid
Christopher Aidan Gilligan
Frank van den Bosch
spellingShingle Christopher Finn McQuaid
Christopher Aidan Gilligan
Frank van den Bosch
Considering behaviour to ensure the success of a disease control strategy
Royal Society Open Science
behavioural model
clean seed system
cassava brown streak
author_facet Christopher Finn McQuaid
Christopher Aidan Gilligan
Frank van den Bosch
author_sort Christopher Finn McQuaid
title Considering behaviour to ensure the success of a disease control strategy
title_short Considering behaviour to ensure the success of a disease control strategy
title_full Considering behaviour to ensure the success of a disease control strategy
title_fullStr Considering behaviour to ensure the success of a disease control strategy
title_full_unstemmed Considering behaviour to ensure the success of a disease control strategy
title_sort considering behaviour to ensure the success of a disease control strategy
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The success or failure of a disease control strategy can be significantly affected by the behaviour of individual agents involved, influencing the effectiveness of disease control, its cost and sustainability. This behaviour has rarely been considered in agricultural systems, where there is significant opportunity for impact. Efforts to increase the adoption of control while decreasing oscillations in adoption and yield, particularly through the administration of subsidies, could increase the effectiveness of interventions. We study individual behaviour for the deployment of clean seed systems to control cassava brown streak disease in East Africa, noting that high disease pressure is important to stimulate grower demand of the control strategy. We show that it is not necessary to invest heavily in formal promotional or educational campaigns, as word-of-mouth is often sufficient to endorse the system. At the same time, for improved planting material to have an impact on increasing yields, it needs to be of a sufficient standard to restrict epidemic spread significantly. Finally, even a simple subsidy of clean planting material may be effective in disease control, as well as reducing oscillations in adoption, as long as it reaches a range of different users every season.
topic behavioural model
clean seed system
cassava brown streak
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170721
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