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Research article2024Peer reviewedOpen access

The impact of the herd health interventions in small ruminants in low input production systems in Ethiopia

Moliso, Mesfin Mekonnen; Molla, Wassie; Arke, Asrat; Nana, Tesfalem; Zewudie, Firdawok Ayele; Tibebu, Abebe; Haile, Aynalem; Rekik, Mourad; Magnusson, Ulf; Wieland, Barbara; Knight-Jones, Theodore

Abstract

Introduction Diseases have a negative impact on production and profitability of small ruminants. A good herd health program can decrease the number of sick animals and improve herd performance. Methods In a longitudinal study, small ruminant herd health interventions such as community-based strategic gastrointestinal (GI) parasite control, prevention and control of major respiratory diseases and capacity development activities were implemented. In four districts of Ethiopia, where the Community Based Breeding Program (CBBP) is implemented, morbidity and mortality data were collected from January 2018 to July 2021 in 1047 smallholder farms with the objective of evaluating the impact of herd health interventions. A total of 2,643 sick animals and 516 deaths of small ruminants were recorded during the study period. The disease cases were categorized into eight groups: gastrointestinal, neurological, reproductive, respiratory, skin, systemic, other diseases (eye disease, foot disease etc) and unknown diseases. Chi-square and proportions were used to analyze morbidity and mortality by district, agro-ecological zone and age of the animal. Results The data showed that the general trend in the occurrence of cases and morbidity rate were decreasing from 2018 to 2021 in intervention villages. Overall, the morbidity rate in young animals (7.36%) was highier than in adults (3.49%) and the mortality rate difference between young and adult animals was also statistically significant (p < 0.001). The morbidity and mortality rates varied significantly (p < 0.001) among districts and among agro-ecologies. According to the data, treating and following up of infected animals reduced the mortality rate significantly. The relative risk of death in treated animals after the case reported was 0.135. Generally, the intervention impact analysis revealed that morbidity rate was significantly decreased (p = 0.009) in intervention years (6.31% in 2018 to 3.02% in 2021) and that herd health interventions provide an added value. Conclusion Generally, herd health intervention had significant impact in reducing the morbidity rates in years and treatment and follow up of sick animals due to early reporting reduced mortality rate significantly. It is recommended that the herd health management should be the core activity under small ruminant production programs.

Keywords

herd health; small ruminants; respiratory diseases; community breeding; vaccination

Published in

Frontiers in Veterinary Science
2024, volume: 11, article number: 1371571
Publisher: FRONTIERS MEDIA SA

SLU Authors

UKÄ Subject classification

Animal and Dairy Science
Clinical Science

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2024.1371571

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/139290