dc.description.abstract | Effective management of veterinary drugs, chemicals and biologicals is a prerequisite for quality,
safe and efficacious livestock health products. Since the introduction of the policy of privatization
and liberalization of veterinary service provision in the country, concerns have been mounting over
quality and efficacy of veterinary supplies sold on the open markets. Like in most tropical developing
countries, livestock production is concentrated in remote locations from the urban centers. Local
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variations in ambient temperature, humidity, transportation and handling conditions can adversely
affect the final quality of these products at the end markets. A study was therefore undertaken to assess
the distribution conditions of animal health products with a view of identifying possible factor that
could reduce their efficacy. Five districts were randomly selected from each of the six major regions
located away from the capital city of Kampala: the northern, west Nile, north eastern, eastern, southern
and south-western regions, respectively. In each district, structured questionnaire were administered at
the height of the wet and dry seasons to randomly select veterinary staff, drug suppliers, transporters,
drug shop owners, drug inspectors and traffic police officers working in the major towns. Mean
ambient temperatures and humidity were recoded during these periods. Data recorded included the
means of transport (road, rail, water, air), the type of vessels (open lorry, closed containers, specialized
trucks, plastic sheeting), the animal health products (antibiotics, antiparasitics, vaccines), length of
single journeys and time of transportation. Higher dry season temperatures (33-370C) were recorded
in the greater compared to the south, where humidity were higher (75-87%) during the rainy seasons.
Distributors can be divided into two major categories: the large scale companies employing veterinary
staff up only 20% and the small time dealers dominated with 80%. With the exception of the southern
region where water transport was predominant (90%), road transport was the most important (96%).
Road appear to more preferred due to their less costs and higher speed in absence of well developed
air and rail infrastructure. Specialized vans were the main vessels used by distribution companies
(80%), while small timers (20%) used open Lorries covered with tents. Antibiotics and antiparasitics
were the most common products, while vaccines did not appear on the lists of items. These may be
due to difficulty of maintaining the cold chain required for most vaccines. All journeys took less than
24 hours, most during the night when products are less likely to suffer extreme temperatures. Further
studies are recommended to assess efficacy of veterinary products sold at open markets.
Key words: Animal health products, Uganda, distribution, efficacy | en_US |