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  • With just 5 veterinarians in the entire country, and those will retire in 3-4 years, there is a desperate need to provide basic animal health care services to the animal owners of Sierra Leone. Animals are vital for survival. While many in the rural parts of Sierra Leone grow crops, others raise goats, chickens, maybe even cattle or sheep. Now there is an effort to select and train someone who is local, someone who is excited to learn more about animal husbandry, animal health, basic medical care for animals. These CAHWs will provide those services that are lacking or hard to find. Better animal care means healthier animals, means more growth, better reproductive rates, better survival, more milk or eggs, more meat, and more money. Better animal health = better human health & prosperity.
    Sierra Leone_15.jpg
  • A future community animal health worker in Koromasilya, Sierra Leone. He, with others, will be trained to provide basic animal health care to the animals of his village, with the hope that improved animal health means more food and more prosperity for the families, including his.
    Sierra Leone_19.jpg
  • Children in the village of Mabamboo, about an hour and a half outside of Freetown, show off their goats that Heifer International has provided. The animals are a source of pride, and a bank account in hard times.
    Sierra Leone_7.jpg
  • A husband and wife display one of their goats that now provide them a bit of security in their lives.
    Sierra Leone_20.jpg
  • This young woman in Koromasilya, Sierra Leone, is very enthusiastic about becoming a CAHW.
    Sierra Leone_18.jpg
  • A family in Mabamboo shows off one of its goats and goat house. The young girl is shy here.
    Sierra Leone_11.jpg
  • The girl is proud and fond of her goat, and less shy now.
    Sierra Leone_12.jpg
  • Adults in Mabamboo are proud too. Goats are bred, and the offspring given away to another family in need. Here, a family shows off its goats, but also the salt lick they made from natural ingredients: ant hill, dried plants, ground fish bones, and other things. Very affordable, and the goats love it.
    Sierra Leone_9.jpg
  • A family in Mabamboo shows off one of its goats and goat house. The young girl is shy here.
    Sierra Leone_11.jpg
  • The Chief of Mabamboo village stands proudly in front of his goat houses. Goats should be confined, otherwise they roam and eat the crops of farmers, and then there is conflict within the community.
    Sierra Leone_10.jpg
  • In the village of Robombeh, not far from Mabamboo, I meet the only woman in the village who can read. She proudly displays her visitor log book, which I sign before I take this picture. She was very nice, very sweet woman.
    Sierra Leone_14.jpg
  • Before I leave Mabamboo, they want a quick group shot. They rush to join the picture. I'm rushed. We have to leave to visit another village and make it back to Freetown before the traffic gets too bad. 
    Sierra Leone_13.jpg
  • The villagers of Mabamboo create their own salt licks for their goats out of multiple ingredients, including ground up ant hills and ground up fish bones.
    Sierra Leone_8.jpg
  • In Sinkunia, a vibrantly dressed woman (here in black and white) and her baby stroll down the main road. The child glances back at the strange white man with a camera. Wonderful.
    Sierra Leone_16.jpg
  • A boy in Bo, Sierra Leone, sells peanuts to make money.
    Sierra Leone_6.jpg
  • In Sinkunia, a vibrantly dressed woman and her baby stroll down the main road. The child glances back at the strange white man with a camera. Wonderful.
    Sierra Leone_17.jpg
  • A mother and child in Koromasilya, Sierra Leone
    Sierra Leone_21.jpg
  • Dogs roam in Freetown, as seen here. These dogs are lounging just outside the only veterinary clinic in Freetown. There are only 5 veterinarians in all of Sierra Leone, and only 1 of these works with animals, and that is on a part-time basis. Dr. Gudush Jalloh runs the nonprofit organization the Sierra Leone Animal Welfare Society, which strives to reduce and control dog populations through spay and neuter. They also vaccinate the dogs against rabies, when they have the vaccine that is, which is hard to get. Dogs are often used for security, or even hunting in rural areas. But rabies occurs everywhere in the country.
    Sierra Leone Rabies_32.jpg
  • The Sierra Leone Animal Welfare Society is led by the only veterinarian in the entire country who works on animals. Supported by grants, the SLAWS teams travels primarily around Freetown to spay and neuter dogs and vaccinate them against rabies. With just 5 veterinarians in the country, and all of them near retirement, Sierra Leone will soon be without veterinary care, which will further jeopardize food security in an already poor country.
    Sierra Leone Rabies_10.jpg
  • The Chief holds the seeds of the Moringa tree. Many parts of the Moringa are used for different purposes, from animal feed to dye to medicine to everyday food. The leaves are high vitamins, calcium and protein. The health and medicinal benefits are numerous and include reducing blood pressure, improving the immune system function, treating stomach ulcers, and more. The seeds are high in oil, which is used in some cosmetics.
    Sierra Leone_29.jpg
  • A young boy pretends he is bitten by a rabid dog and goes to the doctor for help. For children, the skits were the most engaging. A message hidden within entertainment.<br />
<br />
Rabies occurs in more 150 countries and claims the lives of over 55,000 people each year. Approximately 40% of these deaths are in children under the age of 15 years. The animal that is most responsible for these deaths is the dog. While the dog strain of rabies has been eliminated in the United States, it circulates widely in Asia, India, Africa and Latin America.
    Sierra Leone Rabies_2.jpg
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  • Africa, Animals, Dog, Sierra Leone, puppies, Veterinary, boy, rabies, world rabies day, health, medical, child, public health, Kenema
    Sierra Leone Rabies_23.jpg
  • The people of Sierra Leone fight back against rabies by educating communities through World Rabies Day celebrations and events in 2010. From song and dance to skits to vaccination clinics to school competitions, word got out. Still, not enough has been done to rid the country of this killer for good. At Njala University in Sierra Leone, the events for World Rabies Day, 2010, kick off with a prayer to an auditorium filled with school kids and adults from surrounding villages. The day is filled with speeches, songs, dance, music and skits -- all about rabies. With no firm way to diagnose rabies in humans or animals, the exact toll of the disease remains unknown. But people do die.
    Sierra Leone Rabies_1.jpg
  • During the 2 weeks I was in Sierra Leone, approximately 5,000 dogs and 400 cats were vaccinated. Cats are much less common.
    Sierra Leone Rabies_12.jpg
  • Keeping the rabies vaccine at the proper temperature is important. It's no good  if it warms up. It has to be thrown out. So keeping the "cold chain" intact, from time of manufacture to time of administration, is crucial. Here, workers do a great job keeping the vials of vaccine cold on ice.
    Sierra Leone Rabies_15.jpg
  • Every dog or cat vaccinated was recorded: the owner, address, dog's name, color, gender, and so on. This is important for enforcement of rabies laws as well as for knowing who has been vaccinated and who hasn't. 
    Sierra Leone Rabies_16.jpg
  • Many worked together to get the dogs vaccinated and keep the lines moving. Kids carried dogs from across town. Some had leashes, many did not. In line, a dog might try to bite someone.
    Sierra Leone Rabies_14.jpg
  • Every vaccinated dog got a blue collar signifying it was vaccinated. The collars likely didn't last too long.
    Sierra Leone Rabies_17.jpg
  • Talapia ponds of Jimmi, Sierra Leone.
    Sierra Leone_36.jpg
  • A skit keeps the kids entertained, but they also learn at the same time. Here, this funny skit shows men in drag posing as dog owners, and of course dog bites and rabies is a large component of the play. It was well received by the kids.
    Sierra Leone Rabies_27.jpg
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