Human health improvement in Sub-Saharan Africa through integrated management of arthropod transmitted diseases and natural resources.

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Abstract

A concept of an ecosystem approach to human health improvement in Sub-Saharan Africa is presented here. Three factors mainly affect the physical condition of the human body: the abiotic environment, vector-transmitted diseases, and natural resources. Our concept relies on ecological principles embedded in a social context and identifies three sets of subsystems for study and management: human disease subsystems, natural resource subsystems, and decision-support subsystems. To control human diseases and to secure food from resource subsystems including livestock or crops, integrated preventive approaches are preferred over exclusively curative and sectorial approaches. Environmental sustainability - the basis for managing matter and water flows - contributes to a healthy human environment and constitutes the basis for social sustainability. For planning and implementation of the human health improvement scheme, participatory decision-support subsystems adapted to the local conditions need to be designed through institutional arrangements. The applicability of this scheme is demonstrated in urban and rural Ethiopia.

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Baumgärtner, J., Bieri, M., Buffoni, G., Gilioli, G., Gopalan, H., Greiling, J., … Van Schayk, I. (2001). Human health improvement in Sub-Saharan Africa through integrated management of arthropod transmitted diseases and natural resources. Cadernos de Saúde Pública / Ministério Da Saúde, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública, 17 Suppl, 37–46. https://doi.org/10.1590/s0102-311x2001000700012

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