Epidemiology of bacterial infections in livestock and their human keepers in Western Kenya

We report on the results of work on three bacterial zoonoses arising as part of a large project dealing with zoonotic infections amongst livestock and the farmers who keep them. Domestic livestock are an important source of zoonotic infections to humans, particularly in rural parts of Africa. Understanding the interactions between people and their domestic animals, and the transmission of zoonoses between them, is of vital importance in creating the evidence-based disease control policies that are required to protect both human and animal health. The wider project addresses the impact of co-factors (a condition that influences the effects of another condition) on the epidemiology of, and burden imposed by, these diseases. We describe the results of an analysis of three bacterial infections of major public health significance (q-fever, brucellosis and tuberculosis), with a focus on infection in both domestic cattle and humans. In particular, we explore the spatial distribution of these infections in Western Kenya, and explore patterns of infection at the household level in both species (n=450 households). In addition, using multivariate methods, we examine non-zoonotic co-factors as explanatory variables for the individual pathogens, and quantify the risk of co-infections with multiple bacterial zoonoses. We use our wealth of ancillary risk factor data to explain the patterns observed.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fèvre, Eric M., Glanville, William A. de, Doble, L.F., Cook, Elizabeth A.J., Bronsvoort, B.M. de C., Kariuki, S., Wamae, N.
Format: Poster biblioteca
Language:English
Published: International Symposia for Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics 2012-08-20
Subjects:zoonoses, disease control,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/27754
http://www.sciquest.org.nz/node/81045
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-277542023-02-15T10:41:06Z Epidemiology of bacterial infections in livestock and their human keepers in Western Kenya Fèvre, Eric M. Glanville, William A. de Doble, L.F. Cook, Elizabeth A.J. Bronsvoort, B.M. de C. Kariuki, S. Wamae, N. zoonoses disease control We report on the results of work on three bacterial zoonoses arising as part of a large project dealing with zoonotic infections amongst livestock and the farmers who keep them. Domestic livestock are an important source of zoonotic infections to humans, particularly in rural parts of Africa. Understanding the interactions between people and their domestic animals, and the transmission of zoonoses between them, is of vital importance in creating the evidence-based disease control policies that are required to protect both human and animal health. The wider project addresses the impact of co-factors (a condition that influences the effects of another condition) on the epidemiology of, and burden imposed by, these diseases. We describe the results of an analysis of three bacterial infections of major public health significance (q-fever, brucellosis and tuberculosis), with a focus on infection in both domestic cattle and humans. In particular, we explore the spatial distribution of these infections in Western Kenya, and explore patterns of infection at the household level in both species (n=450 households). In addition, using multivariate methods, we examine non-zoonotic co-factors as explanatory variables for the individual pathogens, and quantify the risk of co-infections with multiple bacterial zoonoses. We use our wealth of ancillary risk factor data to explain the patterns observed. 2012-08-20 2013-03-16T16:45:00Z 2013-03-16T16:45:00Z Poster Fèvre, E.M., Glanville, W.A., Doble, L.F., Cook, E.A., Bronsvoort, B.M.D., Kariuki, S. and Wamae, N. 2012. Epidemiology of bacterial infections in livestock and their human keepers in Western Kenya. Poster presented at the 13th conference of the International Society for Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics, Maastricht, the Netherlands, 20-24 August 2012. Durban, South Africa: International Symposia for Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/27754 http://www.sciquest.org.nz/node/81045 en Limited Access International Symposia for Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic zoonoses
disease control
zoonoses
disease control
spellingShingle zoonoses
disease control
zoonoses
disease control
Fèvre, Eric M.
Glanville, William A. de
Doble, L.F.
Cook, Elizabeth A.J.
Bronsvoort, B.M. de C.
Kariuki, S.
Wamae, N.
Epidemiology of bacterial infections in livestock and their human keepers in Western Kenya
description We report on the results of work on three bacterial zoonoses arising as part of a large project dealing with zoonotic infections amongst livestock and the farmers who keep them. Domestic livestock are an important source of zoonotic infections to humans, particularly in rural parts of Africa. Understanding the interactions between people and their domestic animals, and the transmission of zoonoses between them, is of vital importance in creating the evidence-based disease control policies that are required to protect both human and animal health. The wider project addresses the impact of co-factors (a condition that influences the effects of another condition) on the epidemiology of, and burden imposed by, these diseases. We describe the results of an analysis of three bacterial infections of major public health significance (q-fever, brucellosis and tuberculosis), with a focus on infection in both domestic cattle and humans. In particular, we explore the spatial distribution of these infections in Western Kenya, and explore patterns of infection at the household level in both species (n=450 households). In addition, using multivariate methods, we examine non-zoonotic co-factors as explanatory variables for the individual pathogens, and quantify the risk of co-infections with multiple bacterial zoonoses. We use our wealth of ancillary risk factor data to explain the patterns observed.
format Poster
topic_facet zoonoses
disease control
author Fèvre, Eric M.
Glanville, William A. de
Doble, L.F.
Cook, Elizabeth A.J.
Bronsvoort, B.M. de C.
Kariuki, S.
Wamae, N.
author_facet Fèvre, Eric M.
Glanville, William A. de
Doble, L.F.
Cook, Elizabeth A.J.
Bronsvoort, B.M. de C.
Kariuki, S.
Wamae, N.
author_sort Fèvre, Eric M.
title Epidemiology of bacterial infections in livestock and their human keepers in Western Kenya
title_short Epidemiology of bacterial infections in livestock and their human keepers in Western Kenya
title_full Epidemiology of bacterial infections in livestock and their human keepers in Western Kenya
title_fullStr Epidemiology of bacterial infections in livestock and their human keepers in Western Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Epidemiology of bacterial infections in livestock and their human keepers in Western Kenya
title_sort epidemiology of bacterial infections in livestock and their human keepers in western kenya
publisher International Symposia for Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics
publishDate 2012-08-20
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/27754
http://www.sciquest.org.nz/node/81045
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