Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-7cvxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T19:32:39.644Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Technically sound and sustainable Newcastle disease control in village chickens: lessons learnt over fifteen years

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 August 2010

R.G. ALDERS*
Affiliation:
International Rural Poultry Centre, KYEEMA Foundation, G.P.O. Box 3023, Brisbane, Qld 4001, Australia International Veterinary Medicine Section, Department of Environmental and Population Health, Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine, Tufts University, North Grafton, Massachusetts, USA
B. BAGNOL
Affiliation:
International Rural Poultry Centre, KYEEMA Foundation, G.P.O. Box 3023, Brisbane, Qld 4001, Australia
M.P. YOUNG
Affiliation:
International Rural Poultry Centre, KYEEMA Foundation, G.P.O. Box 3023, Brisbane, Qld 4001, Australia
*
Corresponding author: [email protected]
Get access

Abstract

Village chickens can be found in all developing countries and play a vital role in the livelihood strategies of many poor rural households. The implementation of effective village poultry production programmes in Asia, Africa and Latin America has resulted in increased poultry numbers, household purchasing power, home consumption of poultry products and decision-making power for women.

The rapid and wide geographical spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza subtype H5N1 has drawn attention to the neglect of village poultry health. This crisis has presented an opportunity to invest in improved village poultry husbandry that can make a positive contribution to human development in rural areas across a range of endeavours including: empowerment of women (increased productivity, knowledge, participation in community life as vaccinators, etc); HIV/AIDS mitigation; wildlife conservation through a reduction in bushmeat consumption; improved understanding of disease transmission, prevention and control, human nutrition and hygiene; and, most importantly building trust between communities and government agencies.

Key recommendations to support technically sound and sustainable Newcastle disease control programmes in village chickens include encouraging veterinary pharmaceutical manufacturers to develop and observe a code of conduct that supports the supply of appropriate vaccine with an adequate shelf life, giving instructions in local languages, using temperature indicators in vaccine containers and discouraging the payment of commission on the purchase of vaccine. Quality assurance activities should be built into all vaccination programmes to improve cost-efficiency, and should include post-vaccination serological monitoring of a representative sample of birds, especially when a new vaccine or new disease control programme is introduced. Also required is the participation of farmers (male and female) in monitoring and evaluating the effectiveness of vaccination campaigns; and active collaboration with the Ministries of Agriculture, Health and Education in village poultry improvement programmes.

Type
Small-scale Family Poultry Production
Copyright
World's Poultry Science Association 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

ALDERS, R.G. (2004) Poultry for Profit and Pleasure. FAO Diversification Booklet 3. Rome, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.Google Scholar
ALDERS, R. (2006) Thoughts on information, education and communication material available on the prevention and control of HPAI. Discussion paper, Emergency Centre for Transboundary Animal Diseases of the Food and Agriculture Organization, Bangkok. November 2006.Google Scholar
ALDERS, R., DOS ANJOS, F., BAGNOL, B., FRINGE, R., LOBO, Q., MATA, B. and YOUNG, M. (2005a) Case study A: Learning about the control of Newcastle disease with village chicken farmers in Mozambique, in: CONROY, C. (Ed.) Participatory Livestock Research: A Guide. ITDG Publications, Rugby, pp. 153-163.Google Scholar
ALDERS, R., DOS ANJOS, F., BAGNOL, B., FUMO, A., MATA, B. and YOUNG, M. (2003) 2nd Edition Controlling Newcastle Disease in Village Chickens: A Training Manual. Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research Monograph Nº 86, 128 pp.Google Scholar
ALDERS, R.G. and BAGNOL, B. (2007) Effective communication: the key to efficient HPAI prevention and control. World's Poultry Science Journal 63(1): 143-151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
ALDERS, R., BAGNOL, B., HARUN, M. and YOUNG, M. (2005b) Village poultry, food security and HIV/AIDS mitigation. Paper presented at the FAO meeting on HIV/AIDS and livestock in Africa. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. 8-10 March 2005.Google Scholar
ALDERS, R.G. and PYM, R.A.E. (2009) Village poultry: still important to millions, eight thousand years after domestication. World's Poultry Science Journal 65(2): 181-190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
ALDERS, R. and SPRADBROW, P. (2001) Controlling Newcastle Disease in Village Chickens: A Field Manual. Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research Monograph Nº 82, 112 pp.Google Scholar
ALDERS R.G., SPRADBROW P.B. and YOUNG M.P. (Eds), (2009) Village chickens, poverty alleviation and the sustainable control of Newcastle disease. Proceedings of an international conference held in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 5-7 October 2005. Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research Proceedings No. 131, 235 pp.Google Scholar
ALEXANDER, D.J. (1991) Newcastle disease, in: RWEYEMAMU, M.M., PALYA, V., WIN, T. & SYLLA, D. (Eds.) Newcastle Disease Vaccines for Rural Africa, pp. 7-45 (Debre Zeit, Ethiopia, Pan African Veterinary Vaccine Centre).Google Scholar
ALEXANDER, D.J., BELL, J.G. and ALDERS, R.G. (2004) Technology Review: Newcastle disease with special emphasis on its effect on village chickens. FAO Animal Production and Health Paper No. 161. Rome, FAO. 63pp.Google Scholar
BAGNOL, B. (2001) The Social Impact of Newcastle Disease Control, in: ALDERS, R.G. & SPRADBROW, P.B. (Eds) SADC Planning Workshop on Newcastle Disease Control in Village Chickens. Proceedings of an International Workshop, Maputo, Mozambique, 6-9 March 2000. Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research Proceedings Nº 103, pp. 69-75.Google Scholar
BENSINK, Z. and SPRADBROW, P.B. (1999) Newcastle disease virus strain I-2: a prospective thermostable vaccine for use in developing countries. Veterinary Microbiology 68: 131-139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
CAPUA, I. and ALEXANDER, D.J. (2006) The challenge of avian influenza to the veterinary community. Avian Pathology 35(3): 189-205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
COPLAND, J.W. and ALDERS, R.G. (2005) The Australian village poultry development programme in Asia and Africa. World's Poultry Science Journal 61: 31-37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DIAS, P.T., ALDERS, R.G., FRINGE, R. and MATA, B.V. (2001) Laboratory and Field Trials with Thermostable Live Newcastle Disease Vaccines in Mozambique, in: ALDERS, R.G. & SPRADBROW, P.B. (Eds.) SADC Planning Workshop on Newcastle Disease Control in Village Chickens. Proceedings of an International Workshop, Maputo, Mozambique, 6-9 March 2000. Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research Proceedings Nº 103, pp. 91-96.Google Scholar
DOLBERG, F. (2003) Review of household poultry production as a tool in poverty reduction with focus on Bangladesh and India. FAO Pro-Poor Livestock Policy Initiative Working Paper No. 6.Google Scholar
DU GUERNY, J. (2002) Meeting the HIV/AIDS Challenge to Food Security: the role of labour saving technologies in farm-households. UNDP South East Asia HIV and Development Program and the FAO, December 2002.Google Scholar
GRM INTERNATIONAL, (2005) Southern Africa Newcastle Disease Control Project July 2002 – October 2005. Project Completion Report to AusAID, October 2005.Google Scholar
GUÈYE, E.F. (2000) The role of family poultry in poverty alleviation, food security and the promotion of gender equality in rural Africa. Outlook on Agriculture 29(2): 129-136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
IDERIS, A., IBRAHIM, A.L., SPRADBROW, P.B. and HUNG SENG, (1987) Development of Food Pellet Newcastle disease vaccine, in: COPLAND, J.W. (ed.) Newcastle Disease in Poultry: A New Food Pellet Vaccine. Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research Monograph Nº 5, pp. 20-23.Google Scholar
IRPC, (2006) Improvement of Village Chicken Production by Junior Farmers and People Living with HIV/AIDS. Interim Report to FAO. Maputo: International Rural Poultry Centre, KYEEMA Foundation.Google Scholar
SPRADBROW, P.B. (1993/1994) Newcastle disease in village chickens. Poultry Science Review 5: 57-96.Google Scholar
STUBBS, E.L. (1926) Fowl Pest. Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 21: 561-569. Cited by: Swayne, D.E. and Halvorson, D.A. (2003) Influenza. In: Y.M. SAIF (Ed.), Diseases of Poultry, 11th ed., pp. 135-160 (Iowa State University Press, Ames).Google Scholar