Qualitative Causal Loop Diagram: One Health Model Conceptualizing Brucellosis in Jordan
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Qualitative Data Materials
- Publicly available data sets of reported human brucellosis cases (incidence and prevalence) in Jordan between 2004 and 2022 from the Jordan Ministry of Health (MoH) website [16].
- Annual agricultural reports published by the Ministry of Agriculture (MoA). Data included prevalence of B. melitensis in sheep, sheep vaccination levels, and sheep numbers between 2004 and 2022 [8].
- Publicly available data sets from the Jordan Department of Statistics. Obtained data include population numbers in Jordan, sheep farmer numbers, and sheep numbers in Jordan between 2004 and 2022 [17].
- Other publicly available local or global reports by other local, regional or international media and news reports such as Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) reports, the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH), and the World Health Organisation (WHO).
- Published academic literature and policy documents.
2.2. The Stakeholder Identification (Stakeholder Analysis)
- Create a stakeholder map of the brucellosis system in Jordan.
- Prepare a chart of specific stakeholders in this system.
- Identify the stakes of stakeholders.
2.3. Semi-Structured Interviews and Causal Loop Diagram Development
2.3.1. Sample Selection and Sample Size
2.3.2. The Semi-Structured Interviews
2.3.3. Qualitative Data Analysis Process and Causal Loop Modelling
2.4. First Review of Interview Transcripts and Recordings
2.5. Second Review of Interview Recordings: Re-Checking
2.6. Third Review: Review of CLDs with Key Stakeholders
2.7. The Final Causal Loop Diagrams
2.8. Data Management
3. Results
3.1. Problem Identification
3.2. The Causal Loop Diagram
4. Discussion
4.1. Sheep-to-Sheep Brucellosis Transmission (Livestock Infection Sector) Loops R1 and R2
4.2. Sheep-to-People Brucellosis Transmission—Loop B5
4.3. Brucellosis Control Strategies in Jordan—Loops B1, B2, B3 and B4
4.4. Veterinary Services Demand in Jordan—Loop B6
4.5. Brucellosis Transmission is a Complex Problem
4.6. Delays in the Brucellosis Transmission System
4.7. System Archetypes: Shifting the Burden Archetype
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Themes of Question | Question | Prompts |
---|---|---|
1. Main Factors | What are the main factors that drive brucellosis? | Animals’ factors: Brucellosis among sheep. How does it happen? Key factors: environmental health factors. Human factors. Hygienic husbandry practices. How they change brucellosis prevalence? Most important? |
2. Main Stakeholders | Who are the main stakeholders? | How they are involved? How do these stakeholder groups interact? Roles in the infection system. Displaced population. |
3. Sheep Markets | How are sheep markets organised between traders/smallholders? | Types: formal vs. informal. Informal markets: how it operates, how it is affected? Sources of informal sheep. Gov. feed support: consequences. When? Supply sources. Sources of sheep. Medically checked. Accessibility. Regulations. Informal slaughtering practices. Farmers’ preferences: cooperation with informal markets. Reasons. Trade practices. Trade system: formal/informal. Traders’ preferences. Impact of the displaced population? How does demand/supply dynamics affect the brucellosis system? |
4. Sheep Prices | How are the sheep prices set? | How are prices set? How does it affect markets? Prices competition. What affects prices of sheep? How do changes in supply/demand affect the brucellosis system? |
5. Sheep Numbers | How do sheep supply sources affect sheep numbers? | What are the sources of other sources: external/informal supply sources |
How do sheep numbers affect sheep brucellosis? | Why? How? Factors that enable. Factors that disable. Mixing herds? How? | |
6. Changes in Brucellosis | What are the changes observed in brucellosis cases (human/animal)? | Past and now? What has changed? Main reasons for changes, main factors? |
7. Brucellosis policies | How are the control policies implemented? | What should be done? How do control policies help control brucellosis? |
8. Collaboration and communication | What level of collaboration and communication is there between different actors? | Who is involved? Barriers to collaboration? Enablers to collaboration? |
9. Vaccination of Sheep | How does the sheep vaccination system operate? | Factors, government role, need to vaccinate, containment policies, how does it operate? |
10. People’s Awareness | What level of awareness is there of the increase in brucellosis? How does people’s level of awareness of translate into practice? | Education, behaviours. Ingestion of infected foods. High-risk groups, behaviours. Changes in incidence? Geographic distribution? |
Variable (Factors) | Theme 1 | Theme 2 | Theme 3 | Theme 4 | Effect |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Traditional, cultural and religious beliefs | Awareness | N/A | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Low level of farmers’ knowledge about brucellosis | Awareness | Farmers beliefs | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Low level of farmers’ education about brucellosis | Awareness | Farmers education | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Shared trust between smallholders | Awareness | Trust | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Farmer-to-farmer influence | Awareness | N/A | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Farmers’ fear of quarantine | Awareness | Farmers | Reporting | N/A | Negative |
Farmers’ fear of cultural stigma (brucellosis) | Awareness | Farmers | Reporting | N/A | Negative |
Poor socio-economic status of farmers | Awareness | Farmers | Education | N/A | Negative |
Acceptance of brucellosis endemicity | Awareness | Human | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Farmers’ fear of vaccination | Control | Vaccination | Fear | N/A | Negative |
Poor compliance of farmers to vaccination | Control | Vaccination | Farmers | Compliance | Negative |
Vaccine side effects (abortion) | Control | Vaccination | Side effects | N/A | Negative |
Vaccination frequency | Control | Vaccination | Frequency | N/A | Positive |
Vaccine efficiency | Control | Vaccination | Efficiency | N/A | Positive |
Low vaccination rate | Control | Vaccination | Rate | N/A | Negative |
Low vaccination coverage | Control | Vaccination | Coverage | N/A | Positive |
Low control on livestock movement | Control | Movement | livestock | N/A | Negative |
High vaccination burden | Control | Vaccination | Burden | N/A | Negative |
Vaccination in response (female remaining stock) | Control | Vaccination | N/A | N/A | Positive |
Good control of food safety | Control | Food Safety | N/A | N/A | Positive |
Weak hygienic practices of slaughterhouses | Control | Human | Hygienic Practices | N/A | Negative |
Low vaccination rate of Syrian livestock | Control | Vaccination | Syrian Crisis | N/A | Negative |
Weak border security control | Control | Human | Border Security | N/A | Negative |
High dependence on farmers to conduct the vaccination | Control | Vaccination | Human | Implementation | Negative |
Weak supervision level over-vaccination process | Control | Vaccination | Human | Implementation | Negative |
Low level of proper vaccination by farmers | Control | Vaccination | Human | Implementation | Negative |
High corruption level | Control | Vaccination | Human | Implementation | Negative |
Successful vaccination | Control | Vaccination | Human | Implementation | Positive |
Vaccination based on the registration book | Control | Vaccination | livestock | Positive | |
Successful strategy | Control | Vaccination | N/A | N/A | Positive |
Tendency to vaccinate | Control | Vaccination | N/A | N/A | Positive |
High referral to university/private clinics | Control | Treatment | N/A | N/A | Positive |
Vaccine availability | Control | Vaccination | Availability | N/A | Positive |
Gov. medicine availability | Control | Vaccination | Availability | Free | Positive |
Farmer high medicinal share | Control | Vaccination | Availability | N/A | Negative |
Purchase medicine by farmers | Control | Vaccination | Availability | N/A | Negative |
Unregulated trade | Control | Regulation | Trade | N/A | Negative |
Freedom of movement of livestock that aborted | Control | Regulation | Livestock | Husbandry Practices | Negative |
Hygienic control measures on abortions | Control | Regulation | Control | Husbandry Practices | Positive |
Implementation of biosafety measures in farms (not vaccine) | Control | Regulation | Farmers | N/A | Positive |
Implementation of importation regulation | Control | Regulation | Trade | N/A | Positive |
Wrong food handling tech | Control | Food Safety | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Stakeholder collaboration | control | Information share | Collaboration | N/A | Positive |
No involvement of farmers | Control | Information share | Collaboration | N/A | Negative |
Informal communications between stakeholders | Control | Information share | N/A | N/A | Positive |
Good response of vet services | Service delivery | Delivery | Veterinary | N/A | Positive |
High service quality | Service delivery | Delivery | Veterinary | N/A | Positive |
Insufficient number of trained health workers | Service delivery | N/A | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Low-capacity vet services | Service delivery | N/A | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Frequency of field visits by veterinarians | Service delivery | Delivery | Field Visits | N/A | Positive |
Poor accessibility to the veterinary clinic | Service delivery | N/A | N/A | N/A | Negative |
(Distance travelled) Distant locations of the vet clinic | Service delivery | Delivery | Clinic Location | N/A | Negative |
Wide range of provided services by veterinary clinics | Service delivery | Delivery | N/A | Positive | |
Low workforce/human resources in vet services | Service delivery | Delivery | Workforce | N/A | Negative |
High services capacity | Service delivery | Delivery | Capacity | N/A | Positive |
Weak service implementation | Service delivery | Delivery | Implementation | N/A | Negative |
Frequency of field vaccination by a vet nurse | Service delivery | Delivery | Capacity | N/A | Positive |
Frequency of vet clinic visit | Service delivery | Delivery | Human | N/A | Positive |
Lack of diagnostic equipment | Service delivery | Delivery | Human | N/A | Negative |
Low MoA expenses | Service delivery | Delivery | Budget | Expenses | Negative |
High dependence on farmers to vaccinate their livestock | Service delivery | Delivery | Implementation | N/A | Negative |
Staff burnout | Service delivery | Delivery | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Low incentives are given to vet workers | Service delivery | Delivery | Implementation | N/A | Negative |
High feed support quantities | Service delivery | Delivery | Feed Support | Implementation | Positive |
Trust in veterinary services | Service delivery | Delivery | N/A | N/A | Positive |
Overburden on health services | Service delivery | N/A | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Low MoA budget | Service delivery | Delivery | Budget | N/A | Negative |
High expenses of feed support | Service delivery | Delivery | Feed Support | Expenses | Negative |
Seek vet help | Service delivery | Delivery | N/A | Positive | |
Insufficient training; skills of the workforce | Service delivery | Delivery | Training | N/A | Positive |
Loss of staff motivation due to unavailability of incentives | Service delivery | Delivery | N/A | Negative | |
Work force turnover | Service delivery | Delivery | Human Resources | N/A | Negative |
Results return speed | Service delivery | Delivery | Laboratory | N/A | Positive |
Availability of vaccination services at vet clinics | Service delivery | Delivery | N/A | N/A | Positive |
Long waiting times for lab results | Service delivery | N/A | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Veterinary laboratory high capacity | Service delivery | Delivery | Laboratory | N/A | Positive |
Low levels of serious action conducted by the go | Service delivery | Delivery | Implementation | N/A | Negative |
Increased of registered farmers | Service delivery | Delivery | Burden | N/A | Negative |
High reporting of livestock brucellosis cases (REPORTED) | Surveillance | Livestock | Reporting | N/A | Positive |
Unknown outbreak statistics | Surveillance | Livestock | Reporting | N/A | Negative |
Low traceability of brucellosis cases | Surveillance | Livestock | Reporting | N/A | Negative |
Increased complaints | Surveillance | Human | Reporting | N/A | Positive |
High reporting of human cases | Surveillance | Human | Reporting | N/A | Positive |
Regular surveillance | Surveillance | Livestock | N/A | Positive | |
Individual livestock registry update | Surveillance | Livestock | Registration | N/A | Positive |
Underreporting of brucellosis cases | Surveillance | Human | Reporting | N/A | Negative |
Misdiagnosis of brucellosis cases | Surveillance | Human | Diagnosis | N/A | Negative |
Patients not referred to a doctor | Surveillance | Human | referral | N/A | Negative |
Correct vet case diagnosis of brucellosis | Surveillance | Livestock | Diagnosis | N/A | Positive |
Traditional milk selling methods | Regulated Trade | Dairy | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Household dairy production | Regulated Trade | Dairy | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Traditional products sell rate | Regulated Trade | Prices | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Livestock exportation | Regulated Trade | Livestock | Export | N/A | Positive |
Ease of individual trade | Regulated Trade | Livestock | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Unregulated individual trade | Regulated Trade | Livestock | Regulation | N/A | Negative |
Unregulated livestock demand | Regulated Trade | Livestock | Demand | N/A | Negative |
Costs of raising livestock | Regulated Trade | Livestock | Cost | N/A | Negative |
High feed prices | Regulated Trade | Livestock | Price | Feed | Negative |
Illegal livestock price | Regulated Trade | Livestock | Price | N/A | Negative |
Financial losses for farmers | Regulated Trade | Livestock | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Illegal cheap livestock importation | Regulated Trade | Livestock | Price | N/A | Negative |
Feed (bran) black market price | Regulated Trade | Black Market | Feed | Feed Support | Negative |
Illegal livestock black market prices | Regulated Trade | Black Market | Feed | Price | Negative |
Farmer’s fear of financial loss | Regulated Trade | Livestock | Cost | Feed | Negative |
Shared similar appearance between illegal and local livestock | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Syrian Crisis | Syrian livestock | Negative |
Open grazing area for livestock | Transmission Risk Factors | Location | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Ease of movement of livestock | Transmission Risk Factors | Movement | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Unregulated local livestock movement | Transmission Risk Factors | Movement | Regulation | Negative | |
Transboundary livestock black markets | Transmission Risk Factors | Movement | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Shared water drinking tank for livestock | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Traditional calendar (celebrations; etc.) | Transmission Risk Factors | Time | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Improper consumption of livestock products | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Consumption | N/A | Negative |
Raw meat consumption | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Consumption | Meat | Negative |
Low levels of food safety | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Consumption | Food Safety | Negative |
Improper food processing tech (pasteurisation cheese) | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Food Safety | N/A | Negative |
Location of Syrian livestock owners | Transmission Risk Factors | Location | Syrian Crisis | N/A | Negative |
Presence of Brucella in other animals (camel) | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Mixing | N/A | Negative |
Shared living environment (changed to desert) | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Mixing | N/A | Negative |
Mating with livestock of unknown origin | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Mixing | N/A | Negative |
Lending rams between smallholders | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Mixing | N/A | Negative |
Increased livestock numbers in a farm | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Mixing | N/A | Negative |
Length of shared borders (high opportunity for livestock farming) | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Location | N/A | Negative |
Cultural traditions in consumption of dairy products | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Cultural | N/A | Negative |
Individual livestock slaughter | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Hygienic Practices | N/A | Negative |
Unsafe contact with livestock | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Contact | N/A | Negative |
Good human hygienic practices | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Hygienic Practices | N/A | Positive |
High livestock abortion rate | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Hygienic Practices | Abortion | Negative |
Safe livestock mixing | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Mixing | N/A | Positive |
Livestock local markets | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Mixing | Trade | Negative |
Shared traditional culture between smallholders | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Trade | N/A | Negative |
Syrian crisis | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Syrian Crisis | N/A | Negative |
Loss of grazing fields | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Movement | Grazing fields | Negative |
Ignorance of farmers to brucellosis risks | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | N/A | N/A | Negative |
Lambing season | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Time | N/A | Negative |
Livestock movement to neighbouring countries | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Movement | N/A | Negative |
Unregulated livestock migration | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Movement | N/A | Negative |
Disease-free imported livestock | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Mixing | Regulation | Positive |
Young age | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Contact Awareness | N/A | Negative |
Traditional and religious beliefs | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Contact | consumption | Negative |
Trust in imported livestock | Transmission Risk Factors | Livestock | Mixing | Importation | Negative |
Low prices of dairy products | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Consumption | Dairy Production | Negative |
High Syrian diary production rate | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Consumption | Dairy Production | Negative |
Unregulated dairy production | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | Consumption | Dairy Production | Negative |
Individual livestock ownership | Transmission Risk Factors | Human | safe livestock Products | N/A | Negative |
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Group | Position | Organization |
---|---|---|
Health managers at JMoA governorates/directorates | Director of the veterinary health department | MoA |
Head of animal health division | MoA | |
Veterinarians at Jordan Ministry of Agriculture (JMoA). | Animal Health Department | MoA |
Microbiology Lab | MoA | |
Head of quarantine division | MoA | |
Health managers at MoH governorates/directorates | Medical Doctor at MoH | MoH |
Head of disease monitoring and Surveillance department | MoH | |
Fellow university researchers who worked in a similar field area | Senior Disease Control Specialist | EMPHNET |
Academic Professor | University | |
Postdoctoral Researcher | University | |
Local livestock farm owners | Sheep and Livestock owner | Smallholder |
Sheep and Livestock owner | Smallholder | |
Sheep and Livestock owner | Smallholder | |
One Health Committee | Head of quarantine division | MoA |
Scheme | Description |
---|---|
1 | Audio taping of the interview and concurrent notetaking |
2 | Reflective journaling immediately post-interview |
3 | Listening to the audiotape and amending/revision of field notes and observation |
4 | Preliminary content analysis |
5 | Secondary content analysis |
6 | Thematic analysis |
Position | Affiliation | Number |
---|---|---|
Head of quarantine division and member of one health committee | Ministry of Agriculture | 1 |
Head of animal health division and member of one health committee | Ministry of Agriculture | 1 |
Senior disease control specialists | Eastern Mediterranean public health network (EMPHNET) | 1 |
Director head of the animal health division | Ministry of Agriculture | 2 |
Total | 5 |
Problem Dimension | Features | Identified Problems |
---|---|---|
Human Infection | Reporting, diagnosis, endemicity, surveillance, notification | Weak reporting and diagnosis, tolerability of endemic status |
Consumers (Community) | Hygienic practices, food safety, contact measures and safety | Awareness, education, traditional values, cultural views, the micro-economic financial support system |
Trade and Markets | Local markets, individual trade prices, production system | Weak veterinary supervision, unregulated trade, fragmented markets, price change, black markets, gov. feed support, sheep individual ownership |
Sheep Infection | Mixing and movement, reporting, diagnosis, surveillance, notification | Weak reporting and diagnostics, uncontrolled movement and mixing between herds |
Control | Vaccination, regulations implementation, capacity building, budget, reachability | Vaccination strategy and low rates, farmers’ awareness, lack of regulations or implementation, loss of motive for implementation, low budget |
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Taha, H.; Durham, J.; Smith, C.; Reid, S. Qualitative Causal Loop Diagram: One Health Model Conceptualizing Brucellosis in Jordan. Systems 2023, 11, 422. https://doi.org/10.3390/systems11080422
Taha H, Durham J, Smith C, Reid S. Qualitative Causal Loop Diagram: One Health Model Conceptualizing Brucellosis in Jordan. Systems. 2023; 11(8):422. https://doi.org/10.3390/systems11080422
Chicago/Turabian StyleTaha, Haitham, Jo Durham, Carl Smith, and Simon Reid. 2023. "Qualitative Causal Loop Diagram: One Health Model Conceptualizing Brucellosis in Jordan" Systems 11, no. 8: 422. https://doi.org/10.3390/systems11080422
APA StyleTaha, H., Durham, J., Smith, C., & Reid, S. (2023). Qualitative Causal Loop Diagram: One Health Model Conceptualizing Brucellosis in Jordan. Systems, 11(8), 422. https://doi.org/10.3390/systems11080422