Bangladesh study finds farmer knowledge gaps on lumpy skin disease: full analysis

A new study on farmers in northern Bangladesh found that many cattle producers still lack the knowledge and on-farm practices needed to respond effectively to lumpy skin disease, with over half showing poor scores in both knowledge and practice. The authors identified age, education, and training as significant predictors, suggesting that farmer behavior, not just pathogen biology, remains a major variable in disease control. That’s a notable finding for veterinarians and animal health officials working in regions where lumpy skin disease has become an entrenched management challenge. (researcherslinks.com)

The backdrop is a disease that is no longer geographically contained. WOAH says lumpy skin disease, historically concentrated in parts of Africa, has spread since 2000 into the Middle East, the Balkans, Bangladesh, China, and Europe. Bangladesh first saw the disease emerge in 2019, and subsequent outbreak investigations in northern districts documented substantial economic losses and ongoing field exposure among cattle populations. (woah.org)

That broader epidemiologic context helps explain why a farmer knowledge, attitudes, and practices study matters. WOAH describes lumpy skin disease as a highly contagious, vector-borne viral disease affecting cattle and water buffaloes, with transmission linked to biting flies and mosquitoes, while long-distance spread is often associated with movement of infected animals. In practical terms, that means outcomes depend heavily on what happens between veterinary visits: whether sick animals are recognized early, whether movement is limited, whether vaccination is accepted, and whether farm workers understand basic biosecurity. (woah.org)

Bangladesh has already tried to build those systems. FAO reported supporting the government’s vaccination program after the 2020 outbreak, including training around vaccine use and cold-chain storage. National clinical management guidance for lumpy skin disease has also been issued through the Department of Livestock Services, and Bangladesh Agricultural University this year handed over a treatment guideline book to government livestock authorities, signaling continued institutional attention to the disease. Taken together, those developments suggest the new study is landing in a policy environment that is already moving toward more structured control, but still may not be reaching all farmers equally. (fao.org)

Recent research from Bangladesh also supports the idea that the challenge is not only awareness, but sustained implementation. A 2025 Frontiers study reported that both a locally produced attenuated goat pox virus-based vaccine and a commercial Neethling-type vaccine are being used in Bangladesh, while other Bangladesh-based papers have continued to examine economic losses, regional risk factors, and management strategies. The persistence of those studies suggests lumpy skin disease remains a live operational issue for the country’s cattle sector rather than a one-off outbreak story. (frontiersin.org)

Why it matters: For veterinary professionals, the study sharpens a familiar lesson: disease control plans fail when farmer communication fails. If education level and prior training are associated with better lumpy skin disease knowledge and practices, then extension design becomes a clinical tool, not a side issue. Veterinarians, livestock officers, and animal health programs may need to tailor outreach by literacy level, production system, and local risk, while reinforcing messages on vector control, movement restrictions, vaccination timing, and supportive care. In settings with limited workforce capacity, improving what farmers do on their own farms may be one of the highest-leverage interventions available. (researcherslinks.com)

There’s also a wider signal here for transboundary disease preparedness. WOAH has continued to stress early detection, rapid response, movement control, and high-quality vaccination, and recent spread into new parts of Europe shows the disease’s footprint is still changing. For veterinary services in South Asia, studies like this one can help identify where compliance and understanding may be weakest before the next flare-up. That’s especially relevant in cattle systems where smallholder decision-making strongly shapes surveillance quality and outbreak containment. (woah.org)

What to watch: The next step is whether these findings translate into targeted extension and training programs in northern Bangladesh, and whether future studies show measurable gains in farm biosecurity, vaccine uptake, and earlier case reporting. (fao.org)

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