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    Integrated health interventions for improved livelihoods: a case study in Ethiopia

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    Authors
    Kassie, M.
    Abro, Z.
    Wossen, T.
    Ledermann, S.
    Diiro, G.
    Ballo, S.
    Belayhun, L.
    Date
    2020
    Language
    en
    Type
    Journal Article
    Review status
    Peer Review
    ISI journal
    Accessibility
    Open Access
    Usage rights
    CC-BY-4.0
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Kassie, M., Abro, Z., Wossen, T., Ledermann, S., Diiro, G., Ballo, S. & Belayhun, L. (2020). Integrated health interventions for improved livelihoods: a case study in Ethiopia. Sustainability, 12(6), 2284: 1-21.
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/109970
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/su12062284
    Abstract/Description
    Smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) face multifaceted and co-existing risks, such as human and animal diseases and pests. Even though smallholder farmers often experience these challenges simultaneously, interventions to address these challenges are often implemented in a piecemeal fashion. However, managing agricultural production constraints without alleviating human and livestock health burdens might not generate significant and sustained benefits to achieve the desired development outcome (e.g., reducing hunger, malnutrition, and poverty). As such, building farmers’ resilience and adaptive capacity to co-existing production constraints and health burdens may require an integrated and holistic approach. Understanding the potential benefits of an integrated approach would provide critical information, for example, for revisiting the extension systems and for designing pro-poor holistically integrated interventions to tackle interrelated challenges facing smallholder farmers. In this paper, we examined the economic benefits of integrated human–plant–animal health interventions aimed at controlling malaria, stemborer infestations of crops, and trypanosomiasis, along with beekeeping as a livelihood diversification option in rural Ethiopia. We developed a whole-farm multiperiod mathematical linear programming model to examine the economic consequences of the interventions. Our results suggest that relaxing livelihoods and the human–plant–animal health constraints that farmers face has the potential to at least double income. The results further show that exploiting the potential synergies among interventions can generate higher economic benefits. The annual income from the combined interventions is 35% higher than the sum of the income gains from each intervention alone. Our results support an integrated approach to achieve holistic outcomes in areas where these development constraints co-exist.
    CGIAR Author ORCID iDs
    Menale Kassiehttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-2380-754X
    Zewdu Ayalew Abrohttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-4116-7945
    Tesfamicheal Wossen Assfawhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-3672-2676
    Notes
    Open Access Journal; Published online: 14 Mar 2020
    Other CGIAR Affiliations
    Policies, Institutions and Markets
    AGROVOC Keywords
    agricultural production; risk; economic value; smallholders; farmers; livelihoods; ethiopia
    Subjects
    AGRIBUSINESS; FOOD SECURITY; LIVELIHOODS; PLANT HEALTH; PLANT PRODUCTION; SMALLHOLDER FARMERS; SOCIOECONOMY; VALUE CHAINS
    Countries
    Ethiopia
    Regions
    Africa; Eastern Africa
    Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
    International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology; International Institute of Tropical Agriculture; George Washington University
    Investors/sponsors
    Biovision Foundation; Department for International Development, United Kingdom; Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency; Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation; Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, Germany; Government of Kenya; Government of Ethiopia
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    • IITA Journal Articles [4718]

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