-
The Farmer Field School: a method for enhancing the role of rural communities in malaria control ?
Malaria has strong linkages with agriculture, and farmers in malarious regions have a central position in creating or controlling the conditions that favour disease transmission. An interdisciplinary and integrated approach is needed to involve farmers and more than one sector in control efforts. It is suggested that malaria control can benefit from a complementary intervention in rural development, the Farmer Field School (FFS) on Integrated Pest Management (IPM). This is a form of education that uses experiential learning methods to build farmers' expertise, and has proven farm-level and empowerment effects. The benefits of incorporating malaria control into the IPM curriculum are discussed. An example of a combined health-agriculture curriculum, labeled Integrated Pest and Vector Management (IPVM), developed in Sri Lanka is presented. Institutional ownership and support for IPVM could potentially be spread over several public sectors requiring a process for institutional learning and reform.
PMID: 16423295 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
PMCID: PMC1382236
-
Cited by 6 PubMed Central articles
-
ReviewIntegrated vector management for malaria control.
Beier JC, Keating J, Githure JI, Macdonald MB, Impoinvil DE, Novak RJ.
Malar J. 2008 Dec 11; 7 Suppl 1:S4. Epub 2008 Dec 11.
[Malar J. 2008]
-
A tool box for operational mosquito larval control: preliminary results and early lessons from the Urban Malaria Control Programme in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Fillinger U, Kannady K, William G, Vanek MJ, Dongus S, Nyika D, Geissbühler Y, Chaki PP, Govella NJ, Mathenge EM, et al.
Malar J. 2008 Jan 25; 7:20. Epub 2008 Jan 25.
[Malar J. 2008]
-
Reducing vector-borne disease by empowering farmers in integrated vector management.
van den Berg H, von Hildebrand A, Ragunathan V, Das PK.
Bull World Health Organ. 2007 Jul; 85(7):561-6.
[Bull World Health Organ. 2007]
- » See all...