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Participatory impact assessment of animal health through collective action

  1. PENAPH – First technical workshop 12 December, 2012 Murad Ali Senior Programme Officer, Brooke India Participatory Impact Assessment of Animal Health Through Collective Action
  2. The Brooke: An overview • The Brooke is an International animal welfare charity founded in 1934 by Dorothy Brooke, wife of a Cavalry General • The Brooke is dedicated to improving the lives of working horses, mules and donkeys • The Brooke India is an affiliate of Brooke UK, working in 8 states of India through 30 units, covering .23 million equine population 2
  3. Introduction: • Animal health and welfare problems are diverse and often very specific to the context in which the animal works • Various methods are being applied to assess the health and welfare status of animals • Brooke India evolved an innovative participatory process to assess the status of animal health, husbandry practices and related resources, called “Participatory Welfare Need Assessment”- PWNA 3
  4. Introduction: PWNA is set of participatory tools which facilitates communities to: develop their own indicators for assessing equine health and welfare, identify their issues and; taking collective action to improve husbandry practices and health status of their animals 4
  5. Participatory Welfare Need Assessment (PWNA) 5
  6. Steps of PWNA 1 Build understanding on health and welfare of animals 2 Develop assessment Protocol 3 Transect walk & Recording 4 Analysis and Collective action: 5 Repeat transect walk to observe the changes/impact 6
  7. Process: Step-1- Building understanding on animal welfare • Mobilize equine owners into “Equine Welfare Group” • Build understanding on five freedom • Build understanding on welfare issue through: horse puzzle game, children art competition, body mapping etc. 7
  8. Step-2 : Developing Assessment Protocol 8 “If I were a horse” an animal centric tool used to finalize assessment criteria with the community Horse in the center What do you expect from owners? Present status about expectation fulfillment in 0-10 scale ? Effect when expectation were not met Effect, where it can be seen in animal body, practice and resources Putting own-self at the place of animal and start with expectations from its owner to enable the community to identify health and welfare needs. Putting own-self at the place of animal and start with expectations from its owner to enable the community to identify health and welfare needs.
  9. Field exercise : “If I were a horse” 9
  10. “If I were a horse”: Output Husbandry practice related Animal related Resource related 10 Symbol Means ●●● Green circle for good welfare status ●●● Blue/yellow circle for average welfare status ●●● Red circle reflect as poor welfare status An understanding on scoring/marking method developed Type of indicator /criteria developed
  11. Step-3: Transect walk and Recording Use of “Traffic Light” tool for transect walk and recording11
  12. Transect walk and recording 12
  13. Step- :4 Analysis and Collective action List of indicators Name of owners Total 1 2 3 4 A ● ● ● ● B ● ● ● ● C ● ● ● ● D ● ● ● ● E ● ● ● ● Total To analyse prevalence of issues of the community Root cause analysis of issues Collective action to address issue followed by developing village action plan To analyse animal/owners wise ranking Inspiring best performing owners / prize distribution After the transect walk community members sit along with staff to analyze the chart of transect walk 13
  14. Step-5: Repeat the transect walk on regular interval • Transect walk on regular intervals helps analyze the changing trend in each indicator • Based on need and increasing sensitivity towards animals health and welfare, the indicators and process of transect walk keeps changing • Action plan developed based on contributing factors such as season, work load, feeding practices, internal and external influences • Best performing owners, communities, sub-districts awarded on regular interval on the basis of positive changes 14
  15. Repeated transect Regular transect walk on same chart 16 Meeting and prize distribution
  16. Main Results / Impact • Numbers and type of assessment criteria/indicators changed according to situations, need and awareness level of the community • Scoring/transect methods and process of analysis changed after sensitization of community 16 √X or √ Binary ● ● ● Traffic light score 0,5,10 or 1-10 Numerical scoring 1,4,3 / 7,10,15 Weighting according to importance of indicators/issues Mostly animal based indicators Indicators covering animals, practices and resources Reducing numbers of indicators based on sensitivity Indicators based on their severity
  17. Main Results / Impact • Software based aggregation and analysis of PWNA/transect walk data at district level by categorizing indicators and using them for comparative analysis between villages and districts • These analysis helps uncovering higher level factors responsible for the positive and negative status of working equine • Responsibility of carrying out transect walk and their analysis handed-over from staff to communities based institutions 17 Staff led at village level Equal involvement of staff and Community Community led at Village level Association led at sub district level
  18. Main Results / Impact • Visible improvement in the health & welfare of animals such as improved body condition, reduction in wound etc. • The process builds capability of local community in: early recognition of negative changes and diseases of animals and; taking prompt and effective action • Improvement in husbandry practices such as cleaning of stable, grooming, feeding, watering have also seen. 18
  19. 19 • Observation of each others animals by group members during transect walk helps: creating peer pressure to act towards better care of animals promoting mutual learning and; strengthening the problem solving capacity of the communities Incremental improvement in health and welfare status have been seen in whole process Main Results / Impact
  20. Conclusion • A sustainable impact on working equines health and welfare status, resources and husbandry practices through regular collective assessment of animals and analysis of finding and acting upon it • Understanding the trends of equine welfare indicators and their contributing factors to equine welfare at various level helps Brooke India strategize its programmatic approach • PWNA emerged as one of the key process of empowering equine owing community towards better equine welfare in sustainable manner 20
  21. ! 21 THANK YOU !
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