Using the native intelligence of rural people to establish a
surveillance system reduces morbidity, mortality, poverty, and zoonotic and
neglected disease outbreaks among humans and animals. With the high level of
animal-human interaction, there was a strong justification for establishing
Surveillance sentinels for monitoring zoonotic diseases. People in rural
communities constantly interact with domestic and wildlife, placing them at
high risk of disease exposure. The study’s main objective was to explore livestock
and wildlife disease interface and transmission chains within the human
population in the selected communities and establish community-level
epidemiological surveillance systems to reduce disease incidence. Health
personnel are unevenly distributed, with the majority in the capital cities,
making rural communities lack professional health personnel and health care
service providers. Poverty limited rural people’s access to healthcare
facilities. Emerging disease outbreaks resulting from complicated environmental
changes pose a fundamental challenge in low-income countries, impacting the
foundation of human and animal health. People find it difficult to reach
medical centers due to insufficient funds. The study recorded stories from the
people who have been directly affected by the Ebola virus, a zoonotic disease
whose spread could have been quickly curbed had surveillance and AHC been fully
functional in Sierra Leone. In Sierra Leone, more than half of the population
lives in rural communities (58%), with a multidimensional poverty index of
64.8%. The Animal Health Club engaged thirty (30) villages in a focus group
discussion and in-depth interview. Animal Health Club used information obtained
to develop a semi-structured questionnaire (600) and observed the people during
the talks. Community people identify nine sources of diseases, including
humans, poultry, wildlife, pets, ruminants’ crops, water, toilets, and garbage
dumps. The people elected/selected an executive to organize and nominate people
to supervise the nine sources of diseases. Large villages were divided into
zones, while smaller villages remained the same. The people identified ten
domestic animals and twenty-four wildlife animals in their communities and some
diseases associated with them. They also revealed a high level of interaction
between domestic, wildlife, and humans in towns and bush in their respective
communities. Rural people believed animals transfer diseases to humans in
various ways. However, people contract diseases more from human-human
interaction than human-animal interaction. The study’s main objective was to
explore livestock and wildlife disease interface and transmission chains within
the human population in the selected communities and establish community-level
epidemiological surveillance systems to reduce disease incidence. Animal Health Club brings people together in
a town or village to achieve a common goal and objective. Such unity increases
peace and security in the community and improves health, livelihood, food, and
human safety in a cheap, long-lasting, and self-sustainable manner.
Author(s) Details:
Suluku R.,
Department of Animal Science, Njala University, Sierra Leone.
Macavoray
A.,
Department
of Animal Science, Njala University, Sierra Leone.
Kallon M. N.,
Department of Animal Science, Njala University, Sierra Leone.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/RUDHR-V2/article/view/13509
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