Poultry Slaughtering Practices in Rural Communities of Bangladesh and Risk of Avian Influenza Transmission: A Qualitative Study

被引:0
作者
Nadia Ali Rimi
Rebeca Sultana
Kazi Ishtiak-Ahmed
Salah Uddin Khan
M. A. Yushuf Sharker
Rashid Uz Zaman
Eduardo Azziz-Baumgartner
Emily S. Gurley
Nazmun Nahar
Stephen P. Luby
机构
[1] icddr,Center for Communicable Diseases (CCD)
[2] b,undefined
[3] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),undefined
来源
EcoHealth | 2014年 / 11卷
关键词
Avian influenza; Bangladesh; poultry slaughtering; qualitative research; focused ethnography;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Slaughtering sick poultry is a risk factor for human infection with highly pathogenic avian influenza and is a common practice in Bangladesh. This paper describes human exposures to poultry during slaughtering process and the customs and rituals influencing these practices in two Bangladeshi rural communities. In 2009, we conducted 30 observations to observe slaughtering practices and 110 in-depth and short interviews and 36 group discussions to explore reasons behind those practices. The villagers reported slaughtering 103 poultry, including 20 sick poultry during 2 months. During different stages of slaughtering, humans, the environment, healthy poultry, and other animals were exposed to poultry blood and body parts. Women performed most of the slaughtering tasks, including evisceration. Defeathering required the most time and involved several persons. During festivals, ceremonies, and rituals, many people gathered and participated in the slaughtering of poultry. Exposure to poultry slaughtering created numerous opportunities for potential avian influenza transmission. Strategies that can be further tested to determine if they reduce the risk of transmission include skinning the carcasses of sick poultry, using hot water for defeathering and cleaning, using a bucket to contain slaughtering blood and carcass, burying the offal and encouraging handwashing.
引用
收藏
页码:83 / 93
页数:10
相关论文
共 182 条
[1]  
Abdel-Ghafar AN(2008)Update on avian influenza A (H5N1) virus infection in humans The New England Journal of Medicine 358 261-273
[2]  
Chotpitayasunondh T(2007)Village poultry consumption and marketing in relation to gender, religious festivals and market access Tropical Animal Health and Production 39 165-177
[3]  
Gao Z(2008)How resource poor households value and access poultry: village poultry keeping in Tigray, Ethiopia Agricultural Systems 96 175-183
[4]  
Hayden FG(2006)Investigation of avian influenza (H5N1) outbreak in humans—Thailand, 2004 Global Epidemiology 55 3-6
[5]  
Nguyen DH(2010)Paradoxical risk perception and behaviours related to avian flu outbreak and education campaign, Laos BMC Infectious Diseases 10 294-51
[6]  
de Jong MD(1982)Survival of influenza viruses on environmental surfaces Journal of Infectious Diseases 146 47-1313
[7]  
Aklilu HA(2009)Avian influenza virus A (H5N1), detected through routine surveillance, in child, Bangladesh Emerging Infectious Diseases 15 1311-2313
[8]  
Almekinders CJ(2010)Persistence of highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (H7N1) in infected chickens: feather as a suitable sample for diagnosis Journal of General Virology 91 2307-126
[9]  
Udo HM(2010)Seroprevalence of anti-H5 antibody in rural Cambodia, 2007 Journal of Clinical Virology 48 123-12
[10]  
Van der Zijpp AJ(2011)Outbreak of mild respiratory disease caused by H5N1 and H9N2 infections among young children in Dhaka, Bangladesh, 2011 Health and Science Bulletin 9 5-1847