“…Investigating knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) of workers handling meat prior to consumption-i.e., in butcheries and eateries-and their roles in spreading or containing infectious organisms in LMICs comprises an important focus in red meat food safety research [31][32][33][34]. The literature also details activities which undermine food safety-such as eating raw and under-cooked meat, eating meat from sick animals, putting fresh blood on day-old meat [5], workers' lack of or poor use of hygienic and protective equipment, working when ill, inappropriate footwear, unhygienic handling of animal products, and lack of training [35,36]. Often, the emphasis is on what butchers and other actors know about food-borne diseases in scientific terms, which zoonoses they can name, whether they can expand on clinical symptoms, and how they assess the effect of their practices on meat safety [33].…”