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Reducing Calf Mortality in Ethiopia

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Disease and death of young livestock cause financial and production difficulties to farmers around the world. High rates of disease and death occur in various production systems in Ethiopia, hampering livestock production, reducing incomes, and damaging livelihoods. Over the last 10...

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Autores principales: Wong, Johanna T., Lane, Jennifer K., Allan, Fiona K., Vidal, Gema, Vance, Ciara, Donadeu, Meritxell, Jackson, Wendi, Nwankpa, Veronica, Abera, Shubisa, Mekonnen, Getnet Abie, Kebede, Nigatu, Admassu, Berhanu, Amssalu, Kassaw, Lemma, Alemayehu, Fentie, Tsegaw, Smith, Woutrina, Peters, Andrew R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9405078/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36009716
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12162126
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author Wong, Johanna T.
Lane, Jennifer K.
Allan, Fiona K.
Vidal, Gema
Vance, Ciara
Donadeu, Meritxell
Jackson, Wendi
Nwankpa, Veronica
Abera, Shubisa
Mekonnen, Getnet Abie
Kebede, Nigatu
Admassu, Berhanu
Amssalu, Kassaw
Lemma, Alemayehu
Fentie, Tsegaw
Smith, Woutrina
Peters, Andrew R.
author_facet Wong, Johanna T.
Lane, Jennifer K.
Allan, Fiona K.
Vidal, Gema
Vance, Ciara
Donadeu, Meritxell
Jackson, Wendi
Nwankpa, Veronica
Abera, Shubisa
Mekonnen, Getnet Abie
Kebede, Nigatu
Admassu, Berhanu
Amssalu, Kassaw
Lemma, Alemayehu
Fentie, Tsegaw
Smith, Woutrina
Peters, Andrew R.
author_sort Wong, Johanna T.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Disease and death of young livestock cause financial and production difficulties to farmers around the world. High rates of disease and death occur in various production systems in Ethiopia, hampering livestock production, reducing incomes, and damaging livelihoods. Over the last 10 years, studies carried out in Ethiopia have reported death and disease incidence rates in young livestock as high as 31% and 67%, respectively. Diarrhea and respiratory infections are the two leading causes of disease and death in calves in all production systems. In this paper, we describe findings from the experience of the Young Stock Mortality Reduction Consortium. This unique group produced important information on the main causes of disease and death in Ethiopia and created activities for small-scale farmers to address these problems. We found that several diseases caused diarrhea and respiratory infections in young calves in Ethiopia. Improving farmer knowledge and behaviors with respect to basic livestock management led to considerable reductions in young livestock disease and death and has the potential to help improve livestock productivity and human livelihoods in Ethiopia. ABSTRACT: Morbidity and mortality of young stock present economic and production challenges to livestock producers globally. In Ethiopia, calf morbidity and mortality rates, particularly due to diarrhea and respiratory disease, are high, limiting production, incomes, and the ability of farmers to improve their livelihoods. In this paper, we present findings from the combined experience of the Young Stock Mortality Reduction Consortium, which conducted epidemiological and intervention testing in calves across three production systems. This innovative alliance identified Cryptosporidium parvum and E. Coli K99 as the most common causes of diarrhea in pastoral and peri-urban calves; Strongyloides spp. as the most common fecal parasite in mixed crop–livestock and peri-urban calves; and bovine adenovirus, parainfluenza virus-3, and bovine respiratory syncytial virus as the most common respiratory pathogens in peri-urban calves. Furthermore, by improving producer knowledge with respect to fundamental livestock husbandry, feeding, housing, and neonatal care practices, calf mortality risk across production systems was reduced by 31.4 to 71.4% compared to baseline (between 10.5 and 32.1%), whereas risk of diarrhea was reduced by 52.6–75.3% (baseline between 11.4 and 30.4%) and risk of respiratory disease was reduced by 23.6–80.8% (baseline between 3.3 and 16.3%). These findings have informed scaling strategies and can potentially contribute to improved livestock productivity and human livelihoods in Ethiopia.
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spelling pubmed-94050782022-08-26 Reducing Calf Mortality in Ethiopia Wong, Johanna T. Lane, Jennifer K. Allan, Fiona K. Vidal, Gema Vance, Ciara Donadeu, Meritxell Jackson, Wendi Nwankpa, Veronica Abera, Shubisa Mekonnen, Getnet Abie Kebede, Nigatu Admassu, Berhanu Amssalu, Kassaw Lemma, Alemayehu Fentie, Tsegaw Smith, Woutrina Peters, Andrew R. Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Disease and death of young livestock cause financial and production difficulties to farmers around the world. High rates of disease and death occur in various production systems in Ethiopia, hampering livestock production, reducing incomes, and damaging livelihoods. Over the last 10 years, studies carried out in Ethiopia have reported death and disease incidence rates in young livestock as high as 31% and 67%, respectively. Diarrhea and respiratory infections are the two leading causes of disease and death in calves in all production systems. In this paper, we describe findings from the experience of the Young Stock Mortality Reduction Consortium. This unique group produced important information on the main causes of disease and death in Ethiopia and created activities for small-scale farmers to address these problems. We found that several diseases caused diarrhea and respiratory infections in young calves in Ethiopia. Improving farmer knowledge and behaviors with respect to basic livestock management led to considerable reductions in young livestock disease and death and has the potential to help improve livestock productivity and human livelihoods in Ethiopia. ABSTRACT: Morbidity and mortality of young stock present economic and production challenges to livestock producers globally. In Ethiopia, calf morbidity and mortality rates, particularly due to diarrhea and respiratory disease, are high, limiting production, incomes, and the ability of farmers to improve their livelihoods. In this paper, we present findings from the combined experience of the Young Stock Mortality Reduction Consortium, which conducted epidemiological and intervention testing in calves across three production systems. This innovative alliance identified Cryptosporidium parvum and E. Coli K99 as the most common causes of diarrhea in pastoral and peri-urban calves; Strongyloides spp. as the most common fecal parasite in mixed crop–livestock and peri-urban calves; and bovine adenovirus, parainfluenza virus-3, and bovine respiratory syncytial virus as the most common respiratory pathogens in peri-urban calves. Furthermore, by improving producer knowledge with respect to fundamental livestock husbandry, feeding, housing, and neonatal care practices, calf mortality risk across production systems was reduced by 31.4 to 71.4% compared to baseline (between 10.5 and 32.1%), whereas risk of diarrhea was reduced by 52.6–75.3% (baseline between 11.4 and 30.4%) and risk of respiratory disease was reduced by 23.6–80.8% (baseline between 3.3 and 16.3%). These findings have informed scaling strategies and can potentially contribute to improved livestock productivity and human livelihoods in Ethiopia. MDPI 2022-08-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9405078/ /pubmed/36009716 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12162126 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Wong, Johanna T.
Lane, Jennifer K.
Allan, Fiona K.
Vidal, Gema
Vance, Ciara
Donadeu, Meritxell
Jackson, Wendi
Nwankpa, Veronica
Abera, Shubisa
Mekonnen, Getnet Abie
Kebede, Nigatu
Admassu, Berhanu
Amssalu, Kassaw
Lemma, Alemayehu
Fentie, Tsegaw
Smith, Woutrina
Peters, Andrew R.
Reducing Calf Mortality in Ethiopia
title Reducing Calf Mortality in Ethiopia
title_full Reducing Calf Mortality in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Reducing Calf Mortality in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Reducing Calf Mortality in Ethiopia
title_short Reducing Calf Mortality in Ethiopia
title_sort reducing calf mortality in ethiopia
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9405078/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36009716
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12162126
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