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Abstract: This
study analyzes the economic, nutritional and structural determinants of the
adoption of good sanitary practices (vaccination, biosecurity, preventive
feeding) in poultry farming in six CEMAC countries (Cameroon, Congo, Gabon,
Equatorial Guinea, Central African Republic, Chad). Using an unbalanced panel
of 138 observations (2000‑2022, 6 countries) and 2023‑2025 projections used for
sensitivity purposes, we estimate a random‑effects ordered logit (and probit)
model by the Gauss‑Hermite quadrature method (Butler and Moffitt, 1982), which
controls for unobserved country heterogeneity and the temporal persistence of
decisions. The results show that feed nutritional quality, agricultural income,
access to credit, herd size, cooperative membership and veterinary services
significantly increase the probability of adoption, whereas distance to input
markets and epidemics reduce it. Selling price has no significant effect. The
intra‑class correlation parameter (ρ = 0.622) confirms strong unobserved
heterogeneity. Operational critical thresholds are identified (nutritional
index ≥ 58, income ≥ 302,000 FCFA/month, herd size ≥ 28 heads, veterinary
visits ≥ 4/year, distance < 25 km); these values are indicative at the
aggregated level of the six countries and require validation at finer spatial
scales before any direct application. Post‑estimation tests (LR, Hosmer
Lemeshow, Andrews, VIF, bootstrap, ROC) validate the model's robustness. The
study recommends targeted policies to strengthen cooperatives, access to credit
and local veterinary services. DOI: https://doi.org/10.51505/IJEBMR.2026.10612 |
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