Human and animal health surveys among pastoralists
2016; World Organisation for Animal Health; Volume: 35; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.20506/rst.35.2.2547
ISSN1608-0653
AutoresEsther Schelling, Helena Greter, Hamit Kessely, Mahamat Fayiz Abakar, Bongo Naré Richard Ngandolo, Lisa Crump, Bolor Bold, Joldoshbek Kasymbekov, Zolzaya Baljinnyam, Gilbert Fokou, Jakob Zinsstag, Bassirou Bonfoh, Jan Hattendorf, M. Béchir,
Tópico(s)Indigenous Studies and Ecology
ResumoValid human and livestock health surveys, including longitudinal follow-up, are feasible among mobile pastoralists and provide fundamental information to agencies for interventions that are responsive to realities and effective in addressing the needs of pastoralists. However, pastoralists are often excluded from studies, surveillance systems and health programmes. The occurrence of preventable and treatable diseases such as perinatal tetanus, measles and tuberculosis are indicative of limited access to health providers and information. It is difficult for health services to include effective outreach with their available financial and human resources. One consequence is that maternal mortality rates among pastoralists are unacceptably high. Environmental determinants such as the quality of water and the pasture ecosystems further influence the morbidity of pastoralists. In the Sahel, the nutritional status of pastoralist children is seasonally better than that of settled children; but pastoralist women tend to have higher acute malnutrition rates. Pastoralist women are more vulnerable than men to exclusion from health services for different context-specific reasons. Evidence-based control measures can be assessed in cluster surveys with simultaneous assessments of health among people and livestock, where data on costs of disease and interventions are also collected. These provide important arguments for governmental and non-governmental agencies for intervention development. New, integrated One Health surveillance systems making use of mobile technology and taking into account local concepts and the experiences and priorities of pastoralist communities, combined with sound field data, are essential to develop and provide adapted human and animal health services that are inclusive for mobile pastoralist communities and allow them to maintain their mobile way of life.
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