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Publication Details
AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS
SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH
agricultural and biological sciences
A community-based participatory study investigating the epidemiology and effects of rabies to livestock owners in rural Ethiopia
Preventive Veterinary Medicine, Volume 108, No. 1, Year 2013
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Description
A participatory study was carried out in the Oromia region of Ethiopia to ascertain the principal epidemiological features of rabies and its impact on livestock owners. Due to the variation in topography (and therefore livestock and human populations within the study area) villages from both high (>1500. m) and lowland areas were included. Local development agents who had no knowledge of the study's purpose recruited a total of one hundred and ninety six participants from eleven lowland and ten highland villages. A facilitator trained in animal health and participatory techniques conducted the interviews with groups of up to eleven participants. Methods used included ranking, scoring, proportion piling, seasonality calendars and open discussions to investigate a set of questions pre determined from a pilot study. The relative importance of rabies to other zoonoses, temporal distributions of the disease, the species affected, current methods of control within affected species and consequences of their loss were all explored. Data was compared between high and lowland areas and previously published studies.The study found that rabies was considered the zoonosis of greatest risk to public health in both areas. It reportedly occurred with higher frequency in highland areas and subsequently affected more livestock in these parts. Two distinct temporal patterns within the areas were described and participants provided reasons of biological plausibility for the occurrence. Livestock were found to contribute as a higher proportion of all species affected than previously shown in published material. This is likely to be due to the low level of reporting of affected animals to the available veterinary services, from where comparative data originated. The death of infected livestock species was found to have numerous social and economic implications and the ramifications of this are made greater by the perception that the highest incidence of clinical disease being in areas of greatest livestock density. The underestimation of the burden of disease by central bodies is likely to influence the economic rationale behind effective rabies control in the future. © 2012 Elsevier B.V.
Authors & Co-Authors
Okell, Claire Natasha
United Kingdom, Liverpool
University of Liverpool
Pinchbeck, Gina L.
United Kingdom, Liverpool
University of Liverpool
Stringer, Andrew P.
United Kingdom, Liverpool
University of Liverpool
Tefera, Gebre
Ethiopia, Addis Ababa
Addis Ababa University
Christley, Robert M.
United Kingdom, Liverpool
University of Liverpool
Statistics
Citations: 22
Authors: 5
Affiliations: 2
Identifiers
Doi:
10.1016/j.prevetmed.2012.07.003
ISSN:
01675877
Study Design
Cohort Study
Study Locations
Ethiopia