Abstract

BackgroundChildhood stunting and malnutrition condemn millions of people globally to a life of disadvantage and cognitive and physical impairment. Though increasing egg consumption is often seen as an important solution for low and middle income countries (including Ethiopia), emerging evidence suggests that greater exposure to poultry feces may also inhibit child growth due to the effects of enteric bacteria, especially Campylobacter, on gut health.MethodsIn this rapid ethnographic study, we explored village poultry production, child dietary practices, and environmental hygiene conditions as they relate to Campylobacter risk and intervention in 16 villages in Haramaya Woreda, Eastern Ethiopia.ResultsIn the study area, we found that women assumed primary responsibility to care for both chickens and children: in feeding, housing, and healthcare. Most chickens were free-range local indigenous breeds, and flock sizes were small and unstable due to epidemics, seasonal trends, reproductive patterns, and lack of food. Generally, eggs were seen as “too luxurious” to be eaten, and were predominantly sold at local markets for scarce cash, despite high malnutrition rates. Local narratives of extreme poverty, social dietary norms, parental fatalism, and lack of “dietary consciousness” (as it was called) were invoked to explain this. We found that homesteads were highly contaminated with human and animal feces. Although community members viewed chicken feces and poultry gastrointestinal contents as particularly noxious in comparison to other animals because of their feeding behaviour, they did not relate them to any particular disease. Shared human-animal housing and childcare practices place children at high risk of exposure to enteric bacteria from animal manure, despite daily routines designed to manage the domestic landscape.ConclusionsAddressing childhood stunting and malnutrition through egg production in rural landscapes like Haramaya must navigate three distinct health and care regimes: for children, chickens, and home environments. Interventions should be based on a holistic approach to social and economic empowerment, one that considers both women and men and integrates nutrition, health, and community change as its overarching goal.

Highlights

  • Rates of extreme poverty and under-nutrition have dropped precipitately over the last 50 years [1]

  • A study in Zimbabwe found substantial ingestion of chicken feces-related pathogens in infants and young children due to poor hygiene behaviors and geophagy, childhood mouthing and exploratory play [17]. Such epidemiological findings are representative of social and economic determinants of ill-health: poverty, malnutrition, gender inequality, poor housing, and a lack of clean water, hygiene, sanitation, and food safety. We investigate these issues through an exploratory ethnographic lens, as part of a multidisciplinary research project - Campylobacter Genomics and Environmental Enteric Dysfunction (CAGED) in Ethiopia – concerned with understanding the relationships between poor diets, zoonotic Campylobacter spp., chicken management, and childhood stunting in a rural district of Ethiopia

  • The study was guided by two core objectives: 1. To understand local community contexts, sociocultural beliefs and practices, and social organization in relation to poultry, dietary intake, WASH, and child growth as they pertain to Campylobacter epidemiology; 2

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Summary

Introduction

Rates of extreme poverty and under-nutrition have dropped precipitately over the last 50 years [1]. The most recent Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) in 2016 found that 38% of children under five were suffering from chronic malnutrition (stunting or low height-for-age), a rate that rose to nearly 50% in some regions and is nearly equivalent to 6 million children [6]. As noted by Abdulahi et al [7], a complex number of factors are involved: “child age, child sex, complementary food, poor dietary diversity, diarrheal diseases, maternal education, maternal height, residential area and socio- economic status.”. Childhood stunting and malnutrition condemn millions of people globally to a life of disadvantage and cognitive and physical impairment. Though increasing egg consumption is often seen as an important solution for low and middle income countries (including Ethiopia), emerging evidence suggests that greater exposure to poultry feces may inhibit child growth due to the effects of enteric bacteria, especially Campylobacter, on gut health

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