Keeping up with technology: the use of mobile telephony in delivering community-based decentralised animal health services in Mwingi and Kitui Districts, Kenya
2007
J. Kithuka | J. Mutemi | A.,H. Mohamed
This paper explores the introduction of mobile phones and community pay phones within FARM-Africa's Kenya Dairy Goat and Capacity Building Project (KDGCBP), implimented in the districts of Mwingi and Kitui. <br /><br />The authors describe how a freeze in the employment of veterinary graduates by the Kenyan government as a direct result of Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs) in the 1980s has resulted in a steady decline in the number of veterinary personnel over the last twenty years. To improve farmer livelihoods in the The Arid and Semi-Arid Lands (the area most affected by the policy change), the KDGCBP was introduced in the marginalised and resource-poor districts of Mwingi and Kitui. However, poor awareness of animal health and the subsistence-oriented production systems, combined with a poor communication and transport infrastructure, meant that conventional models of private animal health services would not be suitable and, as a result, an alternative animal health delivery service was implemented. A system incorporating a network of Community Animal Health Workers (CAHWs), Animal Health Assistants (AHAs) and Veterinary Surgeons was introduced. Mobile phones and community pay phones were supplied to enable effective communication at all levels within the network, mobile phones and community pay phones were supplied. <br /><br />The authors conclude that overall, the introduction of this new technology has been a success, noting that: mobile phones have played a key role in fighting livestock disease outbreaks and have contributed to increased attendance and participation in animal health providers’ meetings, which can now be convened or cancelled at short notice. use of mobile phones has reduced the transaction costs to the farmer since it is now <br />possible to make a diagnosis over the phone without incurring transportation costs. use of mobile phones has helped the AHAs and vets increase profit margins at their <br />veterinary drug shops; they have used them to place orders for drugs, thus avoiding the <br />time and expense of unnecessary trips for drug procurement. the introduction of community pay phones has led to increased drug shop business <br />particularly in the rural towns. through the use of mobile phones the KDGCBP beneficiaries, who are mostly poor <br />farmers, are more informed about what is happening around them particularly in relation <br />to disease occurrences and market prices of animals. the use of mobile phones by the animal health service providers has greatly increased <br />their social capital and networks. <br /><br />
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