| Literature DB >> 29911165 |
Ayodele O Majekodunmi1,2, Charles Dongkum3, Christopher Idehen3, Dachung Tok Langs4, Susan C Welburn1.
Abstract
Fulani pastoralists in Nigeria lack adequate access to good quality veterinary services and often resort to treating their animals themselves. There are several negative aspects to this, including poor treatment outcomes, misuse of veterinary drugs and subsequent resistance, and further barriers to good relations between pastoralists and veterinary services. A participatory epidemiology survey was undertaken in Fulani communities, to examine their ability to diagnose and treat bovine diseases. Qualitative participatory epidemiology techniques including semi-structured interviews, ranking and participant and non-participant observations were used for data collection. Quantitative analysis to match Fulani disease descriptions to veterinary diseases was done by hierarchical clustering and multi-dimensional scaling. A concurrent parasitological survey for soil-transmitted parasites, trypanosomiasis and tick-borne diseases was undertaken to validate results. Fulani pastoralists displayed high levels of ethnoveterinary knowledge and good clinical diagnostic abilities. Diseases considered important by pastoralists included: hanta (CBPP); sammore (trypanosomiasis); boro (foot and mouth disease), gortowel (liver fluke), dauda (parasitic gastro-enteritis with bloody diarrhoea) and susa (parasitic gastro-enteritis). The parasitology survey supported the participatory epidemiology results but also showed a high prevalence of tick-borne diseases that were not mentioned by pastoralists in this study. The use of "hanta" to describe CBPP is important as the accepted translation is liver-fluke (hanta is the Hausa word for liver). Gortowel and dauda, two previously undescribed Fulfulde disease names have now been matched to liver fluke and PGE with bloody diarrhoea. Fulani showed low levels of bovine veterinary knowledge with mostly incorrect veterinary drugs chosen for treatment. Levels of ethno- and bio-veterinary knowledge and their application within pastoralist livestock healthcare practices are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Cattle; Ethnoveterinary knowledge; Fulani; Participatory diagnosis; Participatory epidemiology; Pastoralist
Year: 2018 PMID: 29911165 PMCID: PMC6000814 DOI: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2018.03.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: One Health ISSN: 2352-7714
Fig. 1Signs of disease used in clinical diagnosis by Fulani.
Fig. 2Diseases reported in Hausa with standard English translations.
Disease descriptions and treatment profiles with paired veterinary diseases.
| Disease | Signs reported by Fulani | Matching disease | Drugs by pairing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weight loss | |||
| Shade seeking | Weight loss | Tylosine | |
| Rough coat | Shade seeking | Long acting Oxytetracycline | |
| Loss of appetite | Laboured breathing | CBPP Vaccine | |
| Breathing difficulty | Salivation | Albendazole | |
| Diarrhoea | Coughing | Levamisole | |
| Lachrymation | Physical weakness | Closantel | |
| Dry/Hard feces | Tremors | Levamisole/Oxyclozanide | |
| Coughing | Nitroxyinil | ||
| Physical weakness | Diminazene | ||
| Tremors | Isometamidium | ||
| Unnamed drugs/mixtures | |||
| Herbs | |||
| Weight loss | Diminazene | ||
| Rough coat | Rough coat | Isometamidium | |
| Loss of appetite | Lachrymation | Albendazole | |
| Diarrhoea | Loss of hair/tail brush | Long acting Oxytetracycline | |
| Lachrymation | Weakness | Tylosine | |
| Loss of hair/tail brush | Abortion | Levamisole | |
| Swollen jaws | Pale mucous membranes | Closantel | |
| Pale mucous membranes | Swollen lymph nodes | Unnamed drugs/mixtures | |
| Swollen lymph nodes | |||
| Retained placenta | |||
| Weight loss | Dexamethasone | ||
| Loss of appetite | Loss of appetite | Procaine | |
| Mouth and tongue blisters | Mouth/tongue lesions | Long acting Oxytetracycline | |
| Salivation | Salivation | Vitamins | |
| Foot ulcers | Foot lesions | Salt lick | |
| Lost hoof | Lost hoof | Unnamed drugs/mixtures | |
| Lameness | Lameness | ||
| Low milk yield | |||
| Failure to conceive | None | ||
| Abortion | Failure to conceive | Sulfadimidine | |
| Abortion | Unnamed drugs/mixtures | ||
| Retained placenta | |||
| Weight loss | Diminazene | ||
| Rough coat | Rough coat | Isometamidium | |
| Diarrhoea | Diarrhoea | Unnamed drugs/mixtures | |
| Lachrymation | Swollen jaws | ||
| Loss of hair/tail brush | Low milk yield | ||
| Low milk yield | Pale mucous membranes | ||
| Rough coat | Long acting Oxytetracycline | ||
| Diarrhoea | Weight Loss | Unnamed drugs/mixtures | |
| Bloody diarrhoea | Rough coat | Herbs | |
| Loss of appetite | |||
| Diarrhoea | |||
| Bloody diarrhoea | |||
| Weight loss | Albendazole | ||
| Rough coat | Weight Loss | Levamisole/Oxyclozanide | |
| Diahorrea | Rough coat | ||
| Loss of appetite | |||
| Diahorrea | |||
| Bloody diahorrea |
Correct treatments.
Correct treatments for liver-fluke.
Fig. 3Comparison of herders' disease descriptions with standard veterinary descriptions using A: hierarchical cluster analysis and B: multidimensional scaling.
Fig. 4Comparison of herders' treatment profiles with standard veterinary treatments using A: hierarchical cluster analysis and B: multidimensional scaling.
Prevalence of parasitic endemic diseases reported by pastoralists and discovered by bioveterinary diagnostic tests.
| Disease | Reported prevalence | Disease | Test prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6.4% | CBPP | – | |
| 8.48% | Trypanosomiasis | 11.1% | |
| 37.9% | FMD | – | |
| 0.8% | Liver-fluke | 0.3% | |
| 0.4% | PGE | 19.6% | |
| 3.8% | |||
| Tick-borne diseases | 0% | Tick-borne diseases | 75% |
| Mixed infections | 0% | Mixed infections | 32% |