College of Medicine & Veterinary Medicine

£5.5m bid to boost livestock health in Africa

Vet experts are delivering a £5.5 million initiative to improve the health and productivity of farmed animals in sub-Saharan Africa.

The scheme aims to boost the livelihoods of livestock farmers by delivering evidence-based technologies that offer sustainable solutions to the challenges they face.

What is SEBI?

Livestock in Africa

The Supporting Evidence Based Interventions initiative (SEBI) is working towards the creation of better targeted animal health and productivity interventions.

By improving the availability of livestock performance data and analytical tours the team strive towards enhancing the welfare of poor livestock keepers.

Evidence

SEBI has received funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Three programmes have been established to help address different challenges.

Reduce Mortality

The first programme aims to identify evidence-based interventions to cut death rates and reproductive losses in dairy cattle in Ethiopia, Nigeria and Tanzania.

Sub-grants will be provided to enable research groups to investigate the causes of these losses. The first of the grants has been awarded to University of Glasgow to build a disease surveillance platform in Tanzania.

Data gathering

Livestock in Africa

A second programme will facilitate data gathering and the development of analytical tools to better track livestock performance.

Researchers are setting up an international network of practitioners – the Livestock Data for Decisions (LD4D) community – to standardise systems of data management across borders.

Veterinary tools

The third strand of the initiative will fund researchers to evaluate innovative veterinary interventions for their use in developing countries.

SEBI has already awarded £125,000 to the University of Guelph to fund field trials of a hand held device that can detect animal diseases. The portable sensor allows dairy farmers to rapidly diagnose specific diseases in cows from a small volume of blood or milk.

SEBI is a pilot project but we anticipate that, if we are successful, it will expand to become the ‘go to’ organisation for the evaluation of novel veterinary technologies and livestock improvement interventions in Africa.

Professor Andy PetersProject lead

Global  and growing team

The SEBI group

A team of eight has been recruited to drive forward the SEBI initiative, which is based at the University of Edinburgh’s Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies.

The team are excited to be expanding and are currently hiring a Project Manager and a Research Assistant.

The current research team are working with a range of partners to meet their targets, including Scotland’s Rural College, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation in Australia and the International Livestock Research Institute in Kenya.

The African livestock sector faces multiple challenges: insufficient and unreliable information to make decisions, poor technological and management interventions to address health and productivity challenges, and a lack of infrastructure to facilitate collaborative solutions across the sector. SEBI is working at this interface to collect quality evidence on livestock health and productivity, connect a global network of practitioners engaged in livestock development, and communicate solutions to aid decision making and guide interventions. We play a small, but hopefully important, role in addressing the challenges the livestock sector face.

Karen SmythSEBI Deputy Director

Related links

SEBI

Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies

Global Academy of Agriculture and Food Security