%0 Journal Article %T Participatory epidemiology of endemic diseases in West African cattle ¨C Ethnoveterinary and bioveterinary knowledge in Fulani disease control %A Ayodele O. Majekodunmi %A Charles Dongkum %A Christopher Idehen %A Dachung Tok Langs %A Susan C. Welburn %J Archive of "One Health". %D 2018 %R 10.1016/j.onehlt.2018.03.001 %X Fulani pastoralists in Nigeria lack adequate access to good quality veterinary services and often resort to treating their animals themselves. There are several negative aspects to this, including poor treatment outcomes, misuse of veterinary drugs and subsequent resistance, and further barriers to good relations between pastoralists and veterinary services. A participatory epidemiology survey was undertaken in Fulani communities, to examine their ability to diagnose and treat bovine diseases. Qualitative participatory epidemiology techniques including semi-structured interviews, ranking and participant and non-participant observations were used for data collection. Quantitative analysis to match Fulani disease descriptions to veterinary diseases was done by hierarchical clustering and multi-dimensional scaling. A concurrent parasitological survey for soil-transmitted parasites, trypanosomiasis and tick-borne diseases was undertaken to validate results %K Fulani %K Pastoralist %K Cattle %K Participatory epidemiology %K Participatory diagnosis %K Ethnoveterinary knowledge %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6000814/