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Evaluation of Public–Private Partnership in the Veterinary Domain Using Impact Pathway Methodology: In-depth Case Study in the Poultry Sector in Ethiopia

Public–private partnerships (PPPs) in the veterinary domain are joint approaches in which public veterinary services and private actors such as private veterinarians, producers' associations, or private companies work together to address complex animal health challenges. They are implemented wo...

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Autores principales: N'Guessan, N'gbocho Bernard, Poupaud, Mariline, Dieuzy-Labaye, Isabelle, Asfaw, Yohannes T., Wieland, Barbara, Tesfu, Fseha, Daniel, Ulric, Tulayakul, Phitsanu, Peyre, Marisa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8901995/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35274017
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.735269
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author N'Guessan, N'gbocho Bernard
Poupaud, Mariline
Dieuzy-Labaye, Isabelle
Asfaw, Yohannes T.
Wieland, Barbara
Tesfu, Fseha
Daniel, Ulric
Tulayakul, Phitsanu
Peyre, Marisa
author_facet N'Guessan, N'gbocho Bernard
Poupaud, Mariline
Dieuzy-Labaye, Isabelle
Asfaw, Yohannes T.
Wieland, Barbara
Tesfu, Fseha
Daniel, Ulric
Tulayakul, Phitsanu
Peyre, Marisa
author_sort N'Guessan, N'gbocho Bernard
collection PubMed
description Public–private partnerships (PPPs) in the veterinary domain are joint approaches in which public veterinary services and private actors such as private veterinarians, producers' associations, or private companies work together to address complex animal health challenges. They are implemented worldwide and can help to strengthen the capacities of veterinary services, but few have been evaluated. None of the evaluations developed in the veterinary domain explicitly addressed PPPs, their complex program design, their evolving governance, and coordination system, and their impacts. This work represents the first application of the participatory impact pathway methodology for the evaluation of a PPP in the veterinary domain. The PPP evaluated aimed at developing the poultry sector in Ethiopia and improving poultry health service coverage, particularly in remote areas. The combination of semi-structured interviews (n = 64) and collective reflection during three workshops (n participants = 26, 48, 18), captured the viewpoints of public and private partners, actors who influenced the partnership, and actors impacted by it. The context of the PPP was analyzed, and the causal relationships between the PPP and its impacts were investigated. This work showed that collaboration between the public and private sector occurred at several administrative levels. The actors considered a variety of impacts, on the economy, business, trust, and health, which were then measured through different indicators. The actors also identified the added value of the PPP to enrich those impacts. The participatory impact pathway methodology helped to strengthen the engagement of actors in the PPP and to formulate recommendations at the policy level to favor positive results. This case study represents a milestone in building a participatory evaluation framework of PPP in the veterinary domain.
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spelling pubmed-89019952022-03-09 Evaluation of Public–Private Partnership in the Veterinary Domain Using Impact Pathway Methodology: In-depth Case Study in the Poultry Sector in Ethiopia N'Guessan, N'gbocho Bernard Poupaud, Mariline Dieuzy-Labaye, Isabelle Asfaw, Yohannes T. Wieland, Barbara Tesfu, Fseha Daniel, Ulric Tulayakul, Phitsanu Peyre, Marisa Front Vet Sci Veterinary Science Public–private partnerships (PPPs) in the veterinary domain are joint approaches in which public veterinary services and private actors such as private veterinarians, producers' associations, or private companies work together to address complex animal health challenges. They are implemented worldwide and can help to strengthen the capacities of veterinary services, but few have been evaluated. None of the evaluations developed in the veterinary domain explicitly addressed PPPs, their complex program design, their evolving governance, and coordination system, and their impacts. This work represents the first application of the participatory impact pathway methodology for the evaluation of a PPP in the veterinary domain. The PPP evaluated aimed at developing the poultry sector in Ethiopia and improving poultry health service coverage, particularly in remote areas. The combination of semi-structured interviews (n = 64) and collective reflection during three workshops (n participants = 26, 48, 18), captured the viewpoints of public and private partners, actors who influenced the partnership, and actors impacted by it. The context of the PPP was analyzed, and the causal relationships between the PPP and its impacts were investigated. This work showed that collaboration between the public and private sector occurred at several administrative levels. The actors considered a variety of impacts, on the economy, business, trust, and health, which were then measured through different indicators. The actors also identified the added value of the PPP to enrich those impacts. The participatory impact pathway methodology helped to strengthen the engagement of actors in the PPP and to formulate recommendations at the policy level to favor positive results. This case study represents a milestone in building a participatory evaluation framework of PPP in the veterinary domain. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-02-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8901995/ /pubmed/35274017 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.735269 Text en Copyright © 2022 N'Guessan, Poupaud, Dieuzy-Labaye, Asfaw, Wieland, Tesfu, Daniel, Tulayakul and Peyre. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Veterinary Science
N'Guessan, N'gbocho Bernard
Poupaud, Mariline
Dieuzy-Labaye, Isabelle
Asfaw, Yohannes T.
Wieland, Barbara
Tesfu, Fseha
Daniel, Ulric
Tulayakul, Phitsanu
Peyre, Marisa
Evaluation of Public–Private Partnership in the Veterinary Domain Using Impact Pathway Methodology: In-depth Case Study in the Poultry Sector in Ethiopia
title Evaluation of Public–Private Partnership in the Veterinary Domain Using Impact Pathway Methodology: In-depth Case Study in the Poultry Sector in Ethiopia
title_full Evaluation of Public–Private Partnership in the Veterinary Domain Using Impact Pathway Methodology: In-depth Case Study in the Poultry Sector in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Evaluation of Public–Private Partnership in the Veterinary Domain Using Impact Pathway Methodology: In-depth Case Study in the Poultry Sector in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Public–Private Partnership in the Veterinary Domain Using Impact Pathway Methodology: In-depth Case Study in the Poultry Sector in Ethiopia
title_short Evaluation of Public–Private Partnership in the Veterinary Domain Using Impact Pathway Methodology: In-depth Case Study in the Poultry Sector in Ethiopia
title_sort evaluation of public–private partnership in the veterinary domain using impact pathway methodology: in-depth case study in the poultry sector in ethiopia
topic Veterinary Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8901995/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35274017
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.735269
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