Impact study of dewormers in goats and chickens in India and Tanzania

The study focused on a comparison of weight gain between treated and non- treated poultry and small ruminants

Abstract

GALVmed Monitoring and Evaluation commissioned a study to comparatively assess weight gain in poultry and small ruminants following treatment or non-treatment with dewormers. Intestinal parasites (helminths) pose a considerable burden to the smallholder livestock farmer. Dewormers (anthelminthics) should therefore be a regularly administered veterinary product. Current and future GALVmed Market Development initiatives all promote the use of dewormers. What is not known is the beneficial impact, in terms of improved smallholder productivity and profitability, arising from the use of these dewormers. There is currently very little published data from the smallholder setting on this and therefore very little by which impact can be reasonably estimated or modelled. With this in mind, GALVmed commissioned this field study to generate data on the effect of dewormers on smallholder livestock.

The study focused on a comparison of weight gain between treated and non- treated poultry and small ruminants. The locations were smallholder settings in rural Tanzania and India.

This is an output from the ‘Global Alliance For Livestock Veterinary Medicines (GALVmed): Phase 2 – Protecting Livestock and Saving Human Lives’ programme

Citation

Paul Bessell (2017) Impact study of dewormers in goats and chickens in India and Tanzania. GALVMed

Impact study of dewormers in goats and chickens in India and Tanzania: Technical Report

Published 31 May 2017