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Medical pluralism and livestock health: ethnomedical and biomedical veterinary knowledge among East African agropastoralists

机译:医学多元化和牲畜健康:东非农牧民中的民族和生物医学兽医知识

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Background Human and animal health are deeply intertwined in livestock dependent areas. Livestock health contributes to food security and can influence human health through the transmission of zoonotic diseases. In low-income countries diagnosis and treatment of livestock diseases is often carried out by household members who draw upon both ethnoveterinary medicine (EVM) and contemporary veterinary biomedicine (VB). Expertise in these knowledge bases, along with their coexistence, informs treatment and thus ultimately impacts animal and human health. The aim of the current study was to determine how socio-cultural and ecological differences within and between two livestock-keeping populations, the Maasai of northern Tanzania and Koore of southwest Ethiopia, impact expertise in EVM and VB and coexistence of the two knowledge bases. Methods An ethnoveterinary research project was conducted to examine dimensions of EVM and VB knowledge among the Maasai ( N =?142 households) and the Koore ( N =?100). Cultural consensus methods were used to quantify expertise and the level of agreement on EVM and VB knowledge. Ordinary least squares regression was used to model patterns of expertise and consensus across groups and to examine associations between knowledge and demographic/sociocultural attributes. Results Maasai and Koore informants displayed high consensus on EVM but only the Koore displayed consensus on VB knowledge. EVM expertise in the Koore varied across gender, herd size, and level of VB expertise. EVM expertise was highest in the Maasai but was only associated with age. The only factor associated with VB expertise was EVM expertise in the Koore. Conclusions Variation in consensus and the correlates of expertise across the Maassi and the Koore are likely related to differences in the cultural transmission of EVM and VB knowledge. Transmission dynamics are established by the integration of livestock within the socioecological systems of the Maasai and Koore and culture historical experiences with livestock disease. Consideration of the nature and coexistence of EVM and VB provides insight into the capacity of groups to cope with disease outbreaks, pharmaceutical use patterns, and the development of community health interventions.
机译:背景技术在牲畜饲养区,人类和动物的健康息息相关。牲畜健康有助于粮食安全,并可以通过人畜共患疾病的传播影响人类健康。在低收入国家,牲畜疾病的诊断和治疗通常是由家庭成员进行的,他们既依靠民族兽医学(EVM),又利用当代兽医学生物医学(VB)。这些知识库的专业知识以及它们的共存,为治疗提供了信息,并最终影响了动物和人类的健康。当前研究的目的是确定坦桑尼亚北部的马赛人和埃塞俄比亚西南部的科雷人这两个牲畜饲养种群之间及其之间的社会文化和生态差异如何影响EVM和VB的专业知识以及这两个知识库的共存。方法进行了一项民族兽医研究项目,以检查马赛族(N = 142户)和库尔岛(N = 100)的EVM和VB知识的维度。使用文化共识方法来量化专业知识和对EVM和VB知识的共识程度。普通最小二乘回归法被用来对各小组之间的专业知识和共识模式进行建模,并检验知识与人口/社会文化属性之间的关联。结果Maasai和Koore的线人对EVM表现出很高的共识,但是只有Koore对VB知识表现出了共识。 Koore的EVM专业知识因性别,牧群规模和VB专业知识水平而异。 EVM专业知识在马赛族中最高,但仅与年龄有关。与VB专业知识相关的唯一因素是Koore中的EVM专业知识。结论整个Maassi和Koore的共识差异和专业知识的相关性很可能与EVM和VB知识的文化传播差异有关。传播动态是通过将牲畜纳入马赛和库尔的社会生态系统以及养殖牲畜疾病的历史经验而建立的。通过考虑EVM和VB的性质和共存关系,可以深入了解各团体应对疾病暴发,药物使用模式以及社区卫生干预措施发展的能力。

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