Animal health beyond the single disease approach – A role for veterinary herd health management in low-income countries?

In order to identify and evaluate health related constraints faced by Ugandan pig farmers, a veterinary herd health management approach (VHHM) was applied in 20 randomly selected pig farms in the Lira district, Uganda. Regular herd visits were conducted between July 2018 and June 2019, using e.g. in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gertzell, E., Magnusson, Ulf, Ikwap, K., Dione, Michel M., Lindström, L., Eliasson-Selling, L., Jacobson, Magdalena
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/113213
_version_ 1855540101641142272
author Gertzell, E.
Magnusson, Ulf
Ikwap, K.
Dione, Michel M.
Lindström, L.
Eliasson-Selling, L.
Jacobson, Magdalena
author_browse Dione, Michel M.
Eliasson-Selling, L.
Gertzell, E.
Ikwap, K.
Jacobson, Magdalena
Lindström, L.
Magnusson, Ulf
author_facet Gertzell, E.
Magnusson, Ulf
Ikwap, K.
Dione, Michel M.
Lindström, L.
Eliasson-Selling, L.
Jacobson, Magdalena
author_sort Gertzell, E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In order to identify and evaluate health related constraints faced by Ugandan pig farmers, a veterinary herd health management approach (VHHM) was applied in 20 randomly selected pig farms in the Lira district, Uganda. Regular herd visits were conducted between July 2018 and June 2019, using e.g. interviews, observations, clinical examinations and laboratory analyzes to gather qualitative and quantitative data on relevant aspects of the production. The pig farmers kept on average 18.6 pigs, including 2.6 sows/year. The production figures varied considerably but were generally poor. The sows produced 1.6 litters/year and 8.2 piglets born alive per litter, the average daily gain was 101 g/day, and the mortality in growers was 9.7%. Four major constraints were identified; poor nutrition, infectious diseases, inferior biosecurity, and poor reproductive management. The quantity and quality of feed was suboptimal. Endo- and ectoparasites were very common, causing diarrhea, bronchitis, pneumonia, skin lesions and pruritus. Post-weaning diarrhea associated with enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli was important in the two largest herds, and parvoviral antibodies were found in seven herds, two experiencing problems with mummified fetuses. Biosecurity practices were insufficient and inconsistent, with free-ranging pigs and the use of village boars being the major risks. Reproductive figures were affected by poor estrus detection and service management. Overall, farmers lacked important knowledge on good management practices. In conclusion, the VHHM identified several important constraints that should be addressed in order to increase the productivity of Ugandan pig herds.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace113213
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1132132025-08-15T13:23:00Z Animal health beyond the single disease approach – A role for veterinary herd health management in low-income countries? Gertzell, E. Magnusson, Ulf Ikwap, K. Dione, Michel M. Lindström, L. Eliasson-Selling, L. Jacobson, Magdalena animal health swine animal diseases research In order to identify and evaluate health related constraints faced by Ugandan pig farmers, a veterinary herd health management approach (VHHM) was applied in 20 randomly selected pig farms in the Lira district, Uganda. Regular herd visits were conducted between July 2018 and June 2019, using e.g. interviews, observations, clinical examinations and laboratory analyzes to gather qualitative and quantitative data on relevant aspects of the production. The pig farmers kept on average 18.6 pigs, including 2.6 sows/year. The production figures varied considerably but were generally poor. The sows produced 1.6 litters/year and 8.2 piglets born alive per litter, the average daily gain was 101 g/day, and the mortality in growers was 9.7%. Four major constraints were identified; poor nutrition, infectious diseases, inferior biosecurity, and poor reproductive management. The quantity and quality of feed was suboptimal. Endo- and ectoparasites were very common, causing diarrhea, bronchitis, pneumonia, skin lesions and pruritus. Post-weaning diarrhea associated with enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli was important in the two largest herds, and parvoviral antibodies were found in seven herds, two experiencing problems with mummified fetuses. Biosecurity practices were insufficient and inconsistent, with free-ranging pigs and the use of village boars being the major risks. Reproductive figures were affected by poor estrus detection and service management. Overall, farmers lacked important knowledge on good management practices. In conclusion, the VHHM identified several important constraints that should be addressed in order to increase the productivity of Ugandan pig herds. 2021-05 2021-04-05T11:45:36Z 2021-04-05T11:45:36Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/113213 en Open Access Elsevier Gertzell, E., Magnusson, U., Ikwap, K., Dione, M., Lindström, L., Eliasson-Selling, L. and Jacobson, M. 2021. Animal health beyond the single disease approach – A role for veterinary herd health management in low-income countries? Research in Veterinary Science 136: 453–463.
spellingShingle animal health
swine
animal diseases
research
Gertzell, E.
Magnusson, Ulf
Ikwap, K.
Dione, Michel M.
Lindström, L.
Eliasson-Selling, L.
Jacobson, Magdalena
Animal health beyond the single disease approach – A role for veterinary herd health management in low-income countries?
title Animal health beyond the single disease approach – A role for veterinary herd health management in low-income countries?
title_full Animal health beyond the single disease approach – A role for veterinary herd health management in low-income countries?
title_fullStr Animal health beyond the single disease approach – A role for veterinary herd health management in low-income countries?
title_full_unstemmed Animal health beyond the single disease approach – A role for veterinary herd health management in low-income countries?
title_short Animal health beyond the single disease approach – A role for veterinary herd health management in low-income countries?
title_sort animal health beyond the single disease approach a role for veterinary herd health management in low income countries
topic animal health
swine
animal diseases
research
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/113213
work_keys_str_mv AT gertzelle animalhealthbeyondthesinglediseaseapproacharoleforveterinaryherdhealthmanagementinlowincomecountries
AT magnussonulf animalhealthbeyondthesinglediseaseapproacharoleforveterinaryherdhealthmanagementinlowincomecountries
AT ikwapk animalhealthbeyondthesinglediseaseapproacharoleforveterinaryherdhealthmanagementinlowincomecountries
AT dionemichelm animalhealthbeyondthesinglediseaseapproacharoleforveterinaryherdhealthmanagementinlowincomecountries
AT lindstroml animalhealthbeyondthesinglediseaseapproacharoleforveterinaryherdhealthmanagementinlowincomecountries
AT eliassonsellingl animalhealthbeyondthesinglediseaseapproacharoleforveterinaryherdhealthmanagementinlowincomecountries
AT jacobsonmagdalena animalhealthbeyondthesinglediseaseapproacharoleforveterinaryherdhealthmanagementinlowincomecountries