A holistic One Health approach to address Taenia solium in Uganda: Exploring the gender structures in WASH and the pork value chain
Details
- Period: 2024-01-01 – 2028-12-31
Background
Taenia solium, more commonly known as pork tapeworm, is a zoonotic parasite that has long been considered as a Neglected Tropical Disease by the World Health Organization (Donadeu et al., 2016). It is responsible for a heavy burden of disease that impacts both human and animal health, and has negative effects on agricultural productivity (Larkins et al., 2022; Ngwili et al., 2023; Phiri et al., 2003; Trevisan et al., 2017). There are several common strategies to address T. solium, but most focus narrowly on particular transmission pathways—particularly of humans or pigs, but rarely the environment. Hence, in spite of initial promising results of these more known management and preventive strategies, they have been slow to elicit sustainable change as many interventions have worked in silos or have failed to consider certain cultural, environmental and societal factors.
Studies done in Uganda and Eastern Zambia have shown that gender roles and beliefs expose women, men and children differently to T. solium; as well as influence how they perform pig rearing activities—e.g. having varying views on letting pigs roam freely to clean-up and eat human faeces in areas that still practice open-defecation (Ngwili et al., 2022, 2023; Thys et al., 2016). Thus, these effects make gender a crucial structure to consider and review for holistic interventions, especially in the area of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH).
The general sentiment that resolving this complex issue requires more collaborative, contextualised and holistic studies and interventions has led several researchers to promote the One Health approach (Mumford et al., 2023) as a framework to better understand and successfully address this particular zoonosis (that is often overlooked in WASH) (Braae et al., 2019; Ngwili et al., 2021, 2023). However, in spite of the cross-cutting implications of gender on the outcomes of this approach, gender inequality and other forms of social marginalization have only recently been considered and talked about.
In the Ugandan context—with its existing gender gaps (Ali et al., 2016; Campbell, 2017)—it becomes vital to utilize a One Health approach that mainstreams gender, and acknowledge it as a major driving force in achieving health and wellbeing for both humans and nonhuman animals (Cataldo et al., 2023). Moreover, in the wider East African context, there does not seem to be any in-depth work done yet that is focused on how existing gender structures in the farming environment and the agriculture and public health sectors reflect on people’s risk perception of T. solium. Gaube et al. (2019) explain that understanding health risk perceptions is important as it influences one’s behaviour in matters of health and sanitation—of which play huge roles in (the prevention of) transmitting the parasite. Additionally, exploring the implications of gender structures on the pigs’ health and wellbeing—as a direct result of their human caretakers’ actions—can further elaborate the persistence of T. solium.
This research intends to build on previous work of the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) on T. solium in Uganda and East Africa, with the overall aim to develop an understanding on the socioecological structures, such as gender, in WASH implementation that continuously leads to the transmission of Taenia solium in pig farming communities in Uganda.
The research will utilize the following frameworks to give structure in the development and analysis:
- The Gender considerations in One Health by Galiè et al. (2024)
- The Gender Structure framework by Risman and Davis (2013), taken in tandem with
- The Socio-ecological Framework for parasitic infections by Wang et al. (2023).
Generating this knowledge can provide the foundation in developing more inclusive, contextualized and holistic WASH interventions and policies that are better at preventing the spread of T. solium. In the long run, doing so can also lead to improved and more gender equitable outcomes in the area—in terms of both health and agriculture.
Collaborative Partners
- SWEDESD
- Centre for Gender Research (Uppsala University)
Project members
References
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