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Early Detection, Reporting and Surveillance for Avian Influenza in Africa (EDRSAIA)

Regions

East Africa, Southern Africa, West Africa

Programme Summary

Launched in October 2007, this project focuses on building capacity for active highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) surveillance in 3 regions of Africa: West Africa (Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, and Togo), East Africa (Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda), and Southern Africa (Malawi, Mozambique, Zambia, and Zimbabwe). Early Detection, Reporting and Surveillance for Avian Influenza in Africa (EDRSAIA) is funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID); the project is being implemented by the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) in partnership with the African Union Interafrican Bureau for Animal Resources (AU-IBAR) and Vétérinaires sans Frontières Belgium (VSF-B), and in collaboration with the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Scheduled to be completed by the end of 2009, this project uses interpersonal communication in an effort to build the foundation for integrated regional surveillance systems, using participation as a strategy for fostering risk-based decision making. The goal is to ensure early disease detection and timely information for disease control.

Communication Strategies

This project involves the use of research to evaluate and apply participatory risk-based approaches to bird flu surveillance, and to document lessons learned. One of the key personnel involved in the project explains that "[p]articipatory epidemiologists understand the importance of tapping into local knowledge and encouraging the participation of people affected. By involving local livestock keepers, we can gather valuable data on how disease is spreading and kept in circulation."

Organisers pursue this participatory strategy by going out into local communities and talking to villagers, with the goal of helping to establish livestock disease prevalence, symptoms, recent outbreaks, and also the impacts of different animal diseases from their perspectives. Multi-disciplinarity and collaboration are key; the perceived need for veterinary and public health to work more closely together shapes these interactions. This research is designed to create integrated regional disease investigation teams capable of carrying out active field investigations for HPAI and other emerging infectious diseases. Participatory disease surveillance (PDS) manuals focused on HPAI intended for practitioners and trainers are being created to help sustain the capacity-building effort.

Development Issues

Health, Natural Resource Management.

Key Points

Organisers explain that, "[i]n poor countries there is often a lack of detailed information on disease outbreaks and prevalence. This is largely due to a lack of veterinary infrastructure, and also because there are typically many remote and isolated communities that are hard to reach. Even when there is some infrastructure in place, many authorities assume that farmers will come to their offices to report diseases. However, farmers would have to travel long distances to reach veterinary posts and incur significant costs when reporting disease problems. Thus it is very difficult to assess the real disease situation and the impacts of animal diseases on livelihoods." This PDS project is designed to fill that gap.

Partners

ILRI, AU-IBAR, VSF-B, FAO, USAID.

Contact

Saskia Hendrickx
Veterinary Epidemiologist
International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI)

Box 30709

Nairobi
00100
Kenya


Jeff Mariner
Veterinary Epidemiologist
International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI)

Box 30709

Nairobi
00100
Kenya
Tel: 254 20 422 3432
Fax: 254 20 422 3001

Source

PADSA brochure [PDF]; ILRI website; and email from Saskia Hendrickx to The Communication Initiative on August 24 2009.


Placed on the Communication Initiative site April 23 2008
Last Updated September 29 2009



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PDSR for HPAI

I could not find the materiel on PDS practitioners and trainers manual for HPAI

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