Climate change and Rift Valley fever disease outbreak: implications for the food environment of pastoralists

Background Rift Valley fever disease affects both livestock and humans. Variations in rainfall patterns have contributed to more frequent intense floods which favour the vector mosquito and associated Rift Valley fever outbreaks. Pastoralists living on poor rangelands depend on livestock for food a...

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Main Authors: Omosa, Esther B., Bett, Bernard K., Kiage, B.
Format: Abstract
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125265
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author Omosa, Esther B.
Bett, Bernard K.
Kiage, B.
author_browse Bett, Bernard K.
Kiage, B.
Omosa, Esther B.
author_facet Omosa, Esther B.
Bett, Bernard K.
Kiage, B.
author_sort Omosa, Esther B.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Background Rift Valley fever disease affects both livestock and humans. Variations in rainfall patterns have contributed to more frequent intense floods which favour the vector mosquito and associated Rift Valley fever outbreaks. Pastoralists living on poor rangelands depend on livestock for food and livelihood. Rift Valley fever outbreak control and management measures such as quarantine and trade bans of livestock and associated products disrupt the food systems in pastoralist settings. This contributes to poor food availability, access, and affordability leading to poor food choice and consumption, and potential negative nutrition, especially in women of reproductive age (WRA) and children younger than 5 years. Evidence on the effects of Rift Valley fever outbreaks on the food environment and nutrition security is scarce. This study analysed the effect of Rift Valley fever outbreak on various domains of the food environment to inform future Rift Valley fever outbreak response, to be comprehensive, and to consider nutrition. Methods This was a mixed-methods study done in pastoralist Isiolo County, Kenya, purposively selected owing to a Rift Valley fever outbreak in 2020. A cross-sectional household survey (n=767), focus group discussions, and in-depth interviews were done. Data on 24-h dietary recall and dietary practices was collected and analysed by means of the NutriSurvey tool and NVivo software for qualitative data. Findings Mortality in sheep, goat, and cattle was 40·2%; 52·8%, and 19·6% respectively; about 70–92% households depended on income from livestock sales. Livestock sales reduced; food prices increased; flesh-meat consumption declined from 19·7% to 14·2% before and during Rift Valley fever outbreak. Only 23·6% of the WRA achieved the minimum dietary diversity score; about 55% of the children consumed insufficient energy, protein, and vitamin A. Interpretation Future Rift Valley fever responses need to consider nutrition because the disease and mortality reduce livestock productivity and associated foods, while Rift Valley fever control measures reduce food access and income, and raise food prices, which contribute to purchase and consumption of inadequate, cheap, and less nutritious foods with potentially negative nutrition outcomes.
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spelling CGSpace1252652024-04-25T06:01:55Z Climate change and Rift Valley fever disease outbreak: implications for the food environment of pastoralists Omosa, Esther B. Bett, Bernard K. Kiage, B. climate change rift valley fever food security pastoralists zoonoses Background Rift Valley fever disease affects both livestock and humans. Variations in rainfall patterns have contributed to more frequent intense floods which favour the vector mosquito and associated Rift Valley fever outbreaks. Pastoralists living on poor rangelands depend on livestock for food and livelihood. Rift Valley fever outbreak control and management measures such as quarantine and trade bans of livestock and associated products disrupt the food systems in pastoralist settings. This contributes to poor food availability, access, and affordability leading to poor food choice and consumption, and potential negative nutrition, especially in women of reproductive age (WRA) and children younger than 5 years. Evidence on the effects of Rift Valley fever outbreaks on the food environment and nutrition security is scarce. This study analysed the effect of Rift Valley fever outbreak on various domains of the food environment to inform future Rift Valley fever outbreak response, to be comprehensive, and to consider nutrition. Methods This was a mixed-methods study done in pastoralist Isiolo County, Kenya, purposively selected owing to a Rift Valley fever outbreak in 2020. A cross-sectional household survey (n=767), focus group discussions, and in-depth interviews were done. Data on 24-h dietary recall and dietary practices was collected and analysed by means of the NutriSurvey tool and NVivo software for qualitative data. Findings Mortality in sheep, goat, and cattle was 40·2%; 52·8%, and 19·6% respectively; about 70–92% households depended on income from livestock sales. Livestock sales reduced; food prices increased; flesh-meat consumption declined from 19·7% to 14·2% before and during Rift Valley fever outbreak. Only 23·6% of the WRA achieved the minimum dietary diversity score; about 55% of the children consumed insufficient energy, protein, and vitamin A. Interpretation Future Rift Valley fever responses need to consider nutrition because the disease and mortality reduce livestock productivity and associated foods, while Rift Valley fever control measures reduce food access and income, and raise food prices, which contribute to purchase and consumption of inadequate, cheap, and less nutritious foods with potentially negative nutrition outcomes. 2022-10 2022-11-02T08:33:44Z 2022-11-02T08:33:44Z Abstract https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125265 en Open Access Elsevier Omosa, E., Bett, B. and Kiage, B. 2022. Climate change and Rift Valley fever disease outbreak: implications for the food environment of pastoralists. Lancet Planetary Health 6(Supplement 1): S17.
spellingShingle climate change
rift valley fever
food security
pastoralists
zoonoses
Omosa, Esther B.
Bett, Bernard K.
Kiage, B.
Climate change and Rift Valley fever disease outbreak: implications for the food environment of pastoralists
title Climate change and Rift Valley fever disease outbreak: implications for the food environment of pastoralists
title_full Climate change and Rift Valley fever disease outbreak: implications for the food environment of pastoralists
title_fullStr Climate change and Rift Valley fever disease outbreak: implications for the food environment of pastoralists
title_full_unstemmed Climate change and Rift Valley fever disease outbreak: implications for the food environment of pastoralists
title_short Climate change and Rift Valley fever disease outbreak: implications for the food environment of pastoralists
title_sort climate change and rift valley fever disease outbreak implications for the food environment of pastoralists
topic climate change
rift valley fever
food security
pastoralists
zoonoses
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125265
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