Evaluation de la campagne de lutte contre la peste des petits ruminants au Togo

2020 
Le Togo compte plus de 4,5 millions de petits ruminants (ovins et caprins) eleves par pres de 80 % de menages agricoles. Malgre son importance economique, cet elevage est confronte a de nombreuses contraintes dont les pathologies parmi lesquelles la Peste des Petits Ruminants (PPR) qui est une pathologique majeure. Plus de 50 foyers de PPR etaient notifies chaque annee avant 2010 en raison d’une faible couverture vaccinale. Pour lutter contre ce fleau, un programme de vaccination a ete initie et debute en 2011 dans le cadre de la mise en oeuvre du programme national d’investissement agricole et de securite alimentaire (PNIASA). Le programme a consiste en une vaccination systematique des petits ruminants, accompagnee d’un deparasitage a l’albendazole sur toute l’etendue du territoire. Cette etude fait l’evaluation de ce programme de vaccination 5 ans apres sa mise en oeuvre. Des prelevements de sang sur les petits ruminants ont ete realises avant le debut du programme pour determiner la situation de reference et apres chaque campagne de vaccination pour estimer le taux de seroconversion d’une part et d’autre part la seroprevalence residuelle. Sur les 5 campagnes de vaccination menees (periode 2011- 2012 a 2015-2016), un effectif cumule de 2 300 000 petits ruminants sur 4 506 489 petits ruminants recenses ont ete vaccines pour une prevision a vacciner de 2 500 000. La seroconversion a evolue durant les 5 campagnes de 70 % a plus de 90%. Aucune difference significative n’a ete notee entre les taux de seroconversion chez les ovins et les caprins. La seroprevalence initiale qui etait de 28,23% + 0,18 en debut de campagne en 2011-2012 a baisse jusqu’a 5,7% a la campagne de 2015-2016. La diminution de l’incidence de la maladie sur le terrain demontre de l’efficacite de la strategie mise en place pour le controle de la PPR. Une strategie nationale a permis au Togo de disposer d’un fonds de roulement pour perenniser ces actions et controler cette maladie. De meme, le Togo s’est inscrit en 2015 dans le programme mondial d’eradication de la PPR (PMEPPR) suivant un processus de controle et d’eradication de la PPR a l’horizon 2030.ABSTRACT:Togo has more than 4.5 million small ruminants (sheep and goats), which are farmed by almost 80% of agricultural households. Despite its economic importance, this livestock is confronted with many constraints including pathologies. Peste des Petits Ruminants (PPR) is one of the major pathological constraints. More than 50 outbreaks of PPR were reported annually before 2010 due to low immunization coverage. To fight this disease, a vaccination program was initiated and started in 2011 as part of the implementation of the National Agricultural Investment and Food Security Program (PNIASA). The vaccination program consists of a routine vaccination of small ruminants surveyed throughout the territory, accompanied by deworming with albendazole. This study evaluates this program after 5 years’ implementation. Blood samples from small ruminants were taken before the beginning of the program to determine the reference situation and after each vaccination campaign to estimate the seroconversion rate on the one hand and the residual seroprevalence on the other hand. Of the 5 vaccination campaigns carried out (from 2011-2012 to 2015-2016), a cumulative total of 2,300,000 small ruminants out of 4,506,489 identified small ruminants in 2015 were vaccinated for a vaccination forecast of 2,500,000. Seroconversion was evolved during the 5 campaigns from 70% to over 90%. No significant difference was noted between seroconversion rates in sheep and goats. The initial seroprevalence, which was 28.23% + 0.18 at the beginning of the campaign in 2011-2012, decreased to 5.7% in the 2015-2016 campaign. The decrease in the incidence of the disease demonstrates the effectiveness of the strategy put in place for its control. A national strategy has enabled Togo to have revolving fund to sustain these actions and control the disease. However, since 2015, Togo has been in the process of monitoring and eradicating PPR by 2030 within the framework of the global PPR eradication program (GEP-PPR).
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []