Difference between revisions of "Team:Uppsala/Human Practices/Market Analysis"

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                 <p> 2. Are the horse owners aware that using dewormers without an initial diagnosis contributes to resistance (the drug will stop being effective/useful) among parasites to these drugs? </p>
 
                 <p> 2. Are the horse owners aware that using dewormers without an initial diagnosis contributes to resistance (the drug will stop being effective/useful) among parasites to these drugs? </p>
 
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<p> We wanted to study whether people aware of resistance also tend to diagnose more often. In these graphs we can follow this correlation in Sweden and Czech Republic. In Sweden majority of respondents were aware of resistance and no assumptions about this affecting number of diagnosis could be made. In comparison answers from Czech Republic were relatively heterogeneous. The group performing no diagnosis also contained a distinguishably large fraction of people unaware of resistance. This suggests that raising the awareness of resistance to a level of common knowledge could contribute to more frequent diagnosing and ultimately decrease risk of resistance development. </p>
  
  
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<p> We wanted to study whether people aware of resistance also tend to diagnose more often. In these graphs we can follow this correlation in Sweden and Czech Republic. In Sweden majority of respondents were aware of resistance and no assumptions about this affecting number of diagnosis could be made. In comparison answers from Czech Republic were relatively heterogeneous. The group performing no diagnosis also contained a distinguishably large fraction of people unaware of resistance. This suggests that raising the awareness of resistance to a level of common knowledge could contribute to more frequent diagnosing and ultimately decrease risk of resistance development. </p>
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<p> As previously seen in figure 6 awareness of resistance Sweden is generally high. However, worth to mention is that the few respondents that answered not believing in resistance were also found in the group using anthelmintics most frequently. In Czech Republic it is relatively more common with more frequent treatment. </p>
 
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                 <p> <strong> Figure 6: </strong> Correlation between the “frequency of diagnoses done for parasitic infections each year” towards “the level of worry towards Strongyles”. The figure to the left comes from the Swedish survey and the figure to the right comes from the Czech survey. NA stands for not applicable and are not numeric answers. </p>
 
                 <p> <strong> Figure 6: </strong> Correlation between the “frequency of diagnoses done for parasitic infections each year” towards “the level of worry towards Strongyles”. The figure to the left comes from the Swedish survey and the figure to the right comes from the Czech survey. NA stands for not applicable and are not numeric answers. </p>
  
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                 <p> 2. How often do the horse owners treat their horse(s) for parasitic infections? </p>
 
                 <p> 2. How often do the horse owners treat their horse(s) for parasitic infections? </p>
 
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<p> The results shown in figure 7 indicates that for the Swedish survey higher concern of anthelmintics resistance correlates with more frequent diagnosting. This indicates that the fear of resistance result in more diagnoses. When analysing the Czech it also shows that more worry among the horse owners result in a higher frequency of diagnoses per year. This indicates that the individual horse owners experiences a sense of security by having their horses diagnosed on a regular basis. </p>
  
  
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                 <p> <strong> Figure 7: </strong> Correlation between the “frequency of diagnoses done for parasitic infections each year” towards “the level of worry towards Strongyles”. The figure to the left comes from the Swedish survey and the figure to the right comes from the Czech survey. NA stands for not applicable and are not numeric answers. </p>
 
                 <p> <strong> Figure 7: </strong> Correlation between the “frequency of diagnoses done for parasitic infections each year” towards “the level of worry towards Strongyles”. The figure to the left comes from the Swedish survey and the figure to the right comes from the Czech survey. NA stands for not applicable and are not numeric answers. </p>
 
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<p> The results shown in figure 7 indicates that for the Swedish survey higher concern of anthelmintics resistance correlates with more frequent diagnosting. This indicates that the fear of resistance result in more diagnoses. When analysing the Czech it also shows that more worry among the horse owners result in a higher frequency of diagnoses per year. This indicates that the individual horse owners experiences a sense of security by having their horses diagnosed on a regular basis. </p>
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<p> The results shown in figure 8 indicates that most respondents do worry about resistance. However there is no clear trend correlating high concern to more careful treatment as the proportionally the amount of treatments remains approximately the same. This might indicate that the worries within the individual horse owner result in a higher frequency of treatments. When comparing to the Czech figure figure 8 also indicates that there is a general higher frequency of treatments. In addition the highest level of worry result in the the highest amount of horse owners who treat their horses more often than 3 times per year. Thereby there is a correlation between worry and treatment. </p>
  
 
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Revision as of 00:39, 17 October 2018