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   Participation of women and children in hunting activities in Sierra Leone and implications for control of zoonotic infections  
   
نویسنده bonwitt j. ,kandeh m. ,dawson m. ,ansumana r. ,sahr f. ,kelly a.h. ,brown h.
منبع plos neglected tropical diseases - 2017 - دوره : 11 - شماره : 7
چکیده    The emergence of infectious diseases of zoonotic origin highlights the need to understand social practices at the animal-human interface. this study provides a qualitative account of interactions between humans and wild animals in predominantly mende villages of southern sierra leone. we conducted fieldwork over 4 months including participant and direct observations,semi-structured interviews (n = 47),spontaneously occurring focus group discussions (n = 12),school essays and informal interviews to describe behaviours that may serve as pathways for zoonotic infection. in this region,hunting is the primary form of contact with wild animals. we describe how these interactions are shaped by socio-cultural contexts,including opportunities to access economic resources and by social obligations and constraints. our research suggests that the potential for exposure to zoonotic pathogens is more widely distributed across different age,gender and social groups than previously appreciated. we highlight the role of children in hunting,an age group that has previously not been discussed in the context of hunting. the breadth of the at risk population forces reconsideration of how we conceptualize,trace and monitor pathogen exposure. © 2017 bonwitt et al.
آدرس department of anthropology,university of durham,durham, United Kingdom, department of social sciences,njala university,bo, Sierra Leone, mercy hospital research laboratorybo, Sierra Leone, mercy hospital research laboratorybo, Sierra Leone, department of microbiology,college of medicine and allied health sciences,university of sierra leone,freetown, Sierra Leone, department of global health and social medicine,king’s college london,london, United Kingdom, department of anthropology,university of durham,durham, United Kingdom
 
     
   
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