What Determines Pig Farmers’ Epidemic Coping Behaviors: A Qualitative Analysis of Endemically Infected Areas in Relation to African Swine Fever
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. African Swine Fever in China
1.2. Explanations for Pig Farmer’s Coping Behavior in Epidemic
2. Materials and Method
2.1. Data Collection
2.2. Analytical Methods
3. Results
3.1. Open Coding
3.2. Axial Coding
3.3. Selective Coding
3.4. Data Saturation Check
4. Discussion
4.1. Impacts of Epidemic Situation on Pig Farmer’s Evaluation
I raised pigs for decades. I have never heard of ASF. Should not ASF come from African, and why it was found here... We use to feed pigs with swill for quite a long time and nothing bad happen. The swill is full of nutrition for pigs to grow up. Pigs fed with swill is more delicious than those pigs raised in big farms. People in our place would pay more money for those pigs fed with swill rather than buying pork from those pigs fed with fodder.(TY09)
The staff in the town comes to all the households raising pigs twice a day to disinfect the pigpens. …… I heard they were saying that feeding pigs with swill might lead to pigs be infected with ASF... According to them (local staff in the village), ASF does not infect people.(LY04)
Local government has set up temporary checkpoints on the way, and they disinfect people and cars passing by our village. It is said that they checked cars to make sure they would not carry any raw meat. I think the government has attached great attention on this, and this means that this infectious disease is very serious. How to say that, but I think since the government has taken it seriously, the problem will not be solved soon.(TY07)
Everyone in my WeChat group talks about this. Some said that ASF only infects pigs, while another group of people reposted message stating that it also infect other domestic animals, such as cattle, sheep, chickens and ducks. Those chickens and ducks are not infected, and why can’t we eat them? What a pity to have all the pigs buried! People around me have killed all the chickens and ducks and put them in the refrigerator, and I plan to kill my chickens and put them in the refrigerator too.(HC01)
This ASF has a great impact in our life. Local government have dispatched to disinfect from house to house and conduct inspection at various locations. It is very strict. A majority of the people will cooperate with the policy, and only few people will not cooperate. After the explanation of local staff, almost all the people can understand and follow it. The local government spares no efforts, and two staff at the temporary station was given a warning punishment since they left without notice. At this very moment, for sure the government will definitely punish any violators severely anyone who hinders the prevention and control of the epidemic. No one dares to sell pork infected.(TY02)
We have experienced that the government compensation failed to allocate to us on time. The provincial government, city government and county government will take our money one by one. Although local staff had confirmed that we could get the money directly in our personal account, I still not that sure. We want to know how about this time; will we get our compensation on time? It is not refund if we cannot get the money. If the compensation were not paid, our farmers would suffer a great more loss.(LY05)
“I have 37 pigs all culled. Among them, two were breeding pigs, around 15 pigs (weighted) more than 300 kg, 10 pigs (weighted) 200 kg, and the rest are piglets. Now the pigs are gone, and we have several hundred kilograms fodder. I have planted several acres of sweet potatoes, and I don’t know how to deal with it. To be honest, I don’t want to slaughter my pigs. Although they said that we could get compensation of 1200 yuan per head, I don’t know when we can get it. My wife and I raised pigs at home for a living for six or seven years. Pig raising is the entire income of our family. Since we have not any household income, we are so worried. You know, it is not easy to find something else to do for us in such a short time.(LY09)
“...I am a farmer. Although I don’t have much knowledge, I know that this disease is very contagious. It is a natural disaster. There is no other way. It is everyone’s responsibility to prevent and control the disease. Individuals who suffer some losses can only complain their bad luck. Whatever the government say, I will follow them, and hope that farmers in other places will not suffer losses (like us).(TJ02)
4.2. Decision-Making in an Epidemic by a Comprehensive Evaluation
ASF is very contagious and has a high fatality rate. There is no medicine to cure it. I heard that pigs infected with this disease would undoubtedly die. If we do not report to the government on time, our pigs as well as other pigs would all die.(LY13)
I will never slaughter my pigs privately at this time. You think, it is a very moment and the government attached such great attention. If caught, one would be taken to the police station, were fined, and may be laughed by your neighbors. No matter how much money I lose, it does not matter. If someone ate infected pork and got sick, it is a big deal. I will definitely not do that kind of thing.... Selling infected pork is very, very bad, I will definitely report it if I found out... Local staff in our village offer free disinfectant, and teach us how to use it and told us to disinfect pigpens twice a day inside and out. It is easy to sterilize inside and outside the pigpen twice a day. Doing this is both good for myself and others. We do not have to pay anything, and it would not take much time. However, it is good for everybody. I have sterilized (pigpens) as required every day since they told me to.(TJ10)
Government has its own reason for doing this. I will do whatever the government people required..(LY06)
I asked my son to check it. The policy stipulates that each pig culled can be compensated 1200 yuan. I think, as long as the government has compensated our loss, we have no reason to complain.(TJ05)
I asked my neighbors, and all of them are willing to cooperate with the government. I think that I will cooperate too. I don’t want people to say that I am a selfish person or something like that.(LY11)
Government staff and village cadres came to tell us that there was an ASF outbreak here. ……the pigs in the pigpen should be culled and then treated innocuously. The television has broadcasted this repeatedly. Almost all the villagers are talking about this. …… Hey, that’s pigs that we raised for such a long time and some of them may not be affected. Of course, we can’t bear it (referring to the culling), but I have to. Once a pig was found to be infected with ASF, all the pigs within three kilometers of the affected pig must be culled to prevent further dissemination. Besides, if my neighbors who raised pigs have already culled theirs, I think there is no other reason to hold mine. I do not like to be portrayed as a selfish person who do not care about other’s interest ……This is a natural disaster. Local government is helping us out of the disaster. Only can we cooperate with them, the loss could be minimized.(LY09)
4.3. Two Approaches for Farmers to React towards Epidemic
Why pigs have not been infected must be culled? I think (the government) should explain it to us. Culling pigs infected is Ok, but we have to cull pigs not infected. They should be tested at least. If they were infected, it was not too late to cull them. We have had swine fever before, but only infected pigs were culled. They (refer to the local government) should test it before kill it aimlessly.(LY14)
They (refer to the local government) told us not to slaughter our own pigs the day before, and the next day (they) came to cull the pigs. Nobody asked us... Regardless of the size of the pig, the compensation for farmers is 1200 yuan. I have nine pigs, all of them over three hundred kilograms. If I sold ten yuan a kilo, my pigs worth 3000 yuan each. My neighbor has three little pigs, less than one hundred kilograms each. If sold the same price, they worth less than 1000 yuan. They earn a lot! This is unfair! That’s why I think our compensation should vary according to the size.(TY04)
Pigs are the major income of our family. Because of ASF, all pigs have been culled now. I don’t know what to do and all of sudden my pigs are gone. It is not easy to find alternative jobs, and I am desperate.(TJ06)
5. Conclusions
5.1. Principle Findings
5.2. Practical Implications
5.3. Limitations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Interview Outline
- 1.
- Which channels did you get information on the ASF epidemic from?
- 2.
- Do you know the source, etiology and symptoms of ASF?
- 3.
- What has the government taken to prevent and control ASF?
- 4.
- How do you say about the government measures?
- 5.
- How do you perceive the ASF epidemic?
- 6.
- How has the ASF epidemic affected you and your family?
- 7.
- What actions have you taken to deal with the ASF outbreak?
- 8.
- What are your reasons for taking this action?
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Categories | Number of Participants | Percentage (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Gender | Male | 31 | 68.9 |
Female | 14 | 31.1 | |
Age | Under 40 years old | 9 | 20.0 |
40–50 years old | 10 | 22.2 | |
Over 50 years old | 26 | 57.8 | |
Breeding experience | Less than five years | 12 | 26.7 |
5–10 years | 15 | 33.3 | |
Over 10 years | 18 | 40.0 | |
Breeding size | Under 30 pigs | 32 | 71.1 |
30–100 pigs | 11 | 24.5 | |
Over 100 pigs | 2 | 4.4 | |
Education | Junior high school or below | 21 | 46.7 |
High school | 18 | 40 | |
Junior college | 6 | 13.3 |
Concept | Preliminary Categories |
---|---|
Isolation, quarantine, culling, sanitization, disinfection, propaganda | Government Response |
cooperation with the government’s quarantine and disinfection measures, do not consume pork, and monitor prevention and control behaviors | Public Response |
Government or public emergency response speed after an ASF outbreak: rapid response, slow response | Response speed |
Government as a source of information about ASF: central government, provincial government, city government, county government, town government, village committee | Government |
Unofficial media release information related to ASF: unofficial websites, self-published media | Media |
People who spread information about African swine fever: neighbors, relatives, friends | Public |
Information dissemination through paper-based printed materials: newspapers, bulletin boards | Paper-based media |
Information dissemination through electronic technology and equipment channels: internet, TV, telephone, radio | Electronic media |
Face-to-face transmission of information: verbal transmission, door-to-door service | Face-to-face communication |
Strength of grassroots government in implementing epidemic prevention and control policies: strong, weak | Strength of policy implementation |
Government resource investment in epidemic prevention and control: large, small | Resource investment |
Government credibility: high, low | Government credibility |
Breeding size of farmers: free-range farmers (<30 heads), large-scale farmers (>=30 heads) | Breeding size |
Breeding income share of total household income: 0–30%, 31–60%, 61–100% | Breeding income share |
Sense of social responsibility of farmers: high, low | Sense of social responsibility |
Farmers’ perception of the probability of ASF epidemic: large, average, small | Probability of epidemic |
Farmers’ perception of the severity of the consequences of the ASF epidemic: serious, average, not serious | Severity of consequences |
Effectiveness and benefits of adopting response behaviors: assessment of one’s own behavioral ability to prevent disease, assessment of the effectiveness of individual disease prevention on overall disease prevention | Behavioral efficacy |
Costs or losses of adopting coping behaviors: monetary costs, energy costs, time costs, re-employment costs | Behavioral cost |
Farmers simply process information based on intuition: direct action | Heuristic path |
Farmers process information after searching for it and analyzing it rationally: information search, search for response behavior options, analysis of response behavior options | Analytical path |
Behaviors related to cooperative culling: cooperative, uncooperative | Cooperative culling behaviors |
Behavior related to disinfection: disinfection, no disinfection | Disinfection behavior |
Behavior related to epidemic reporting: reporting, not reporting | Epidemic reporting behavior |
Behavior related to disposal of dead pigs: disposal without harm, disposal without disposal, sale | Handling behavior of dead pigs |
Emotional distress relief through emotional catharsis: doubts, dissatisfaction, complaints, anger, panic, helplessness | Emotional catharsis |
Seeking social support to relieve emotional distress: seeking explanation, seeking comfort, seeking compensation | Seeking emotional support |
Preliminary Category | Main Category |
---|---|
government response, public response, response speed | emergency response |
government, the media, the public | information sources |
print media, electronic media, face-to-face communication | access to information |
policy implementation strength, resource input, government credibility | governmental characters |
breeding scale, ratio of breeding on household income, social responsibility | the farmer’s characters |
epidemic incidence probability, severity of consequences | epidemic risk perception |
behavior efficiency, behavior cost | coping behavior perception |
heuristic path, analytical path | information processing |
cooperation with culling behavior, disinfection behavior, epidemic report behavior, disease dead pig disposal behavior | problem-orientedness |
empathy and seeking emotional support | emotion-orientedness |
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Xu, B.; Zhou, L.; Qiu, C.; Li, Y.; Zhang, W. What Determines Pig Farmers’ Epidemic Coping Behaviors: A Qualitative Analysis of Endemically Infected Areas in Relation to African Swine Fever. Vet. Sci. 2021, 8, 266. https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci8110266
Xu B, Zhou L, Qiu C, Li Y, Zhang W. What Determines Pig Farmers’ Epidemic Coping Behaviors: A Qualitative Analysis of Endemically Infected Areas in Relation to African Swine Fever. Veterinary Sciences. 2021; 8(11):266. https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci8110266
Chicago/Turabian StyleXu, Bo, Lijuan Zhou, Chengmei Qiu, Yanling Li, and Wei Zhang. 2021. "What Determines Pig Farmers’ Epidemic Coping Behaviors: A Qualitative Analysis of Endemically Infected Areas in Relation to African Swine Fever" Veterinary Sciences 8, no. 11: 266. https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci8110266
APA StyleXu, B., Zhou, L., Qiu, C., Li, Y., & Zhang, W. (2021). What Determines Pig Farmers’ Epidemic Coping Behaviors: A Qualitative Analysis of Endemically Infected Areas in Relation to African Swine Fever. Veterinary Sciences, 8(11), 266. https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci8110266