Weibel Daniel, Schelling Esther, Bonfoh Bassirou, Utzinger Jürg, Hattendorf Jan, Abdoulaye Mahamat, Madjiade Toguina, Zinsstag Jakob
Department of Public Health and Epidemiology, Swiss Tropical Institute, P.O. Box, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland.
Geospat Health. 2008 Nov;3(1):113-24. doi: 10.4081/gh.2008.237.
There is a pressing need for baseline demographic and health-related data to plan, implement and evaluate health interventions in developing countries, and to monitor progress towards international development goals. However, mobile pastoralists, i.e. people who depend on a livestock production system and follow their herds as they move, remain marginalized from rural development plans and interventions. The fact that mobile people are hard to reach and stay in contact with is a plausible reason why they are underrepresented in national censuses and/or alternative sequential sample survey systems. We present a proof-of-concept of monitoring highly mobile, pastoral people by recording demographic and health-related data from 933 women and 2020 children and establishing a biometric identification system (BIS) based on the registration and identification of digital fingerprints. Although only 22 women, representing 2.4% of the total registered women, were encountered twice in the four survey rounds, the approach implemented is shown to be feasible. The BIS described here is linked to a geographical information system to facilitate the creation of the first health and demographic surveillance system in a mobile, pastoralist setting. Our ultimate goal is to implement and monitor interventions with the "one health" concept, thus integrating and improving human, animal and ecosystem health.
在发展中国家,迫切需要基线人口统计和健康相关数据,以规划、实施和评估卫生干预措施,并监测在实现国际发展目标方面的进展。然而,流动牧民,即依赖畜牧生产系统并随畜群迁移的人群,在农村发展计划和干预措施中仍然处于边缘地位。流动人群难以接触和保持联系,这可能是他们在全国人口普查和/或替代顺序抽样调查系统中代表性不足的原因。我们通过记录933名妇女和2020名儿童的人口统计和健康相关数据,并基于数字指纹的登记和识别建立生物识别系统(BIS),展示了对高度流动的牧民进行监测的概念验证。尽管在四轮调查中仅有22名妇女(占登记妇女总数的2.4%)被再次遇到,但所实施的方法被证明是可行的。这里描述的生物识别系统与地理信息系统相连接,以促进在流动牧民环境中创建首个健康和人口监测系统。我们的最终目标是运用“同一健康”概念实施和监测干预措施,从而整合并改善人类、动物和生态系统健康。