Sunday, 2 February 2020

A Manual For The Primary Animal Health Care Worker















Working guide
Guidelines for training
Guidelines for adaptation
FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS
Rome, 1994

The designations employed and the presentation of material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.

M-27
ISBN 92-5-103258-0
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. Applications for such permission, with a statement of the purpose and extent of the reproduction, should be addressed to the Director, Publications Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Viale delle Terme di Caracalla, 00100 Rome, Italy.
© FAO 1994

This electronic document has been scanned using optical character recognition (OCR) software and careful manual recorrection. Even if the quality of digitalisation is high, the FAO declines all responsibility for any discrepancies that may exist between the present document and its original printed version.

Table of Contents


Part 1: Working guide

Chapter 1: Animals and the community
Unit 1: Why do we keep animals?
Unit 2: Animals and the environment
Chapter 2: The animal body
Unit 3: Organs and systems of the body
Unit 4: Body temperature
Unit 5: Appearance of the healthy animal
Unit 6: Spread of disease
Chapter 3: Cattle, sheep, goats and buffalo
Unit 7: Ruminants
Unit 8: Bloat (tympany)
Unit 9: How to age sheep, goats, cattle and buffalo
Unit 10: Restraining cattle and buffalo
Unit 11: Foot (hoof) care
Unit 12: Shearing and dagging (crutching)
Unit 13: Dehorning calves, lambs and kids
Unit 14: Castration of ruminants
Unit 15: Internal parasites of ruminants
Unit 16: External parasites of ruminants
Unit 17: Signs of heat (oestrus) in ruminants
Unit 18: Pregnancy in ruminants
Unit 19: Calving (parturition)
Unit 20: Lambing and kidding (parturition)
Unit 21: Care of the newborn
Unit 22: Milk production and the udder
Unit 23: Feed and water for ruminants
Unit 24: Grazing management
Unit 25: Cattle plague (rinderpest) and foot and mouth disease
Chapter 4: The pig
Unit 26: Handling and restraining pigs
Unit 27: Teeth clipping in young pigs
Unit 28: Internal parasites of pigs
Unit 29: Skin infections of pigs
Unit 30: Heat (oestrus) in the sow
Unit 31: Pregnancy and farrowing (giving birth)
Unit 32: Care of the sow and piglet
Unit 33: Castrating piglets
Unit 34: Feeding pigs
Unit 35: Housing for pigs
Unit 36: Ear tagging or notching (identification)
Chapter 5: Horses, donkeys and mules
Unit 37: How to restrain horses, donkeys and mules
Unit 38: How to age horses
Unit 39: Hoof (foot) care, shoeing and lameness
Unit 40: Colic
Unit 41: Internal parasites of equines
Unit 42: Skin and coat disorders of equines
Unit 43: Heat (oestrus), mating and pregnancy
Unit 44: Foaling and caring for the young
Unit 45: Stabling and grazing
Unit 46: Feed and water for equines
Unit 47: Grooming and tackle (tack)
Unit 48: African horse sickness
Chapter 6: Chickens and ducks
Unit 49: Keeping chickens and ducks
Unit 50: Housing for chickens and ducks
Unit 51: Feeding chickens and ducks
Unit 52: Problems caused by poor feed (deficiencies)
Unit 53: Incubators and brooders
Unit 54: Brooding
Unit 55: Internal parasites of chickens and ducks
Unit 56: External parasites of chickens and ducks
Chapter 7: Camels, llamas and alpacas
Unit 57: Camels, llamas and alpaca
Unit 58: Ageing camels by the teeth
Unit 59: Breeding camels
Unit 60: Milk and care of the young camel
Unit 61: Feeding and watering of camels
Unit 62: Surra of camels (trypanosomiasis)
Unit 63: Internal parasites of camels
Unit 64: Skin diseases of camels
Unit 65: Foot problems in camels
Chapter 8: The rabbit
Unit 66: Breeding and feeding rabbits
Unit 67: Health problems of rabbits
Chapter 9: Treating sick animals in general
Unit 68: Diarrhoea and constipation
Unit 69: Salivation and mouth problems
Unit 70: Fever
Unit 71: Coughing and breathing problems
Unit 72: Eye problems
Unit 73: Wounds and bleeding
Unit 74: Fractures (broken bones)
Unit 75: Lumps under the skin
Unit 76: Poisoning
Chapter 10: Animal health and the community
Unit 77: Rabies (mad dog disease)
Unit 78: Tuberculosis (TB)
Unit 79: Hydatid disease
Unit 80: Screwworm
Unit 81: Ringworm
Unit 82: Disposal of dead animals
Unit 83: Disposal of dung
Unit 84: Health of the community
Annexes
Annex 1: Medicines
Annex 2: Important veterinary tools (instruments)
Annex 3: Important techniques
1. Sterilisation of instruments
2. Injections
3. Vaccinations
4. Drenching
5. Boluses (tablets)
6. Stomach tubing
7. Cleaning the udder
8. Taking blood samples
9. Making blood smears
10. Collecting samples for the laboratory
11. Collecting faecal samples
12. Spraying
13. Dipping
14. Knots and tethering
Annex 4: Selection of animals for breeding
Annex 5: Record keeping
Annex 6: Weights and measures
Annex 7: Explanation of terms and index

Part 2: Guidelines for trainers

1. Creating conditions for learning
What the trainer must do
The conditions of learning
2. Evaluating the trainee's progress
Simple and complex tasks
Developing trainee's learning abilities
Evaluating the performance of trainees and the success of the training programme
3. The units and learning modules
4. Examples of training plans

Part 3: Guidelines for adapting this manual

1. Introduction
2. The need for primary animal health care
3. The Primary Animal Health Care Worker (PAHCW) and the community.
4. The role of women in PAHC
5. Working group
6. Adapting the manual
7. Adaptation process
8. Health of the community
9. Who uses this manual?
10. Translation 

Courtesy Access Manuals from  FAO : Working guide Guidelines for training Guidelines for adaptation

THE RABBIT

I: Breeding and feeding rabbits

Rabbits are easy to house, cheap to feed and produce a very good quality meat.
One male rabbit (buck) and two females (does) given care and good feeding, will produce more than 50 rabbits a year. This means you can sell or eat almost one rabbit every week of the year.

Learning objectives

After studying this unit you should know:
1 Breeding rabbits.
2 Care of young rabbits.
3 Housing (hutches) for rabbits.
4 Feed and water for rabbits.
5 Uses of rabbits.
Breeding rabbits

The female rabbit (doe) does not come into heat (oestrus) as do other animals. The doe will accept the male (buck) at any time of the year.

Does are mature and can breed at 5 to 6 months of age and can continue to have young for 4 years.
The length of pregnancy in the rabbit is 31 days and the doe can produce from 1 to 12 young each time she gives birth. She can become pregnant again within a few days of giving birth. However it is not good practice to allow the doe to become pregnant straight after giving birth. It is better to mate the doe when her young (litter) are 4 weeks old so that they are 8 weeks old when the next litter is born. In this way one doe can produce 6 litters a year.

Two weeks after mating you can feel the young through the side of the doe's belly.

Male rabbit (buck)

Traditionally people keep all their rabbits together. However it is advisable to keep the buck separate from the does and do not keep bucks together as they will fight. The doe must be taken to the buck for mating and then returned to her place. A buck can be used until he is 7 years old. If you have large numbers of rabbits together use one buck with every 15 does.

Giving birth and care of the young rabbit

The doe needs a nest in which to give birth. She will line the nest with her fur. Do not check the young until the day after birth and do not touch them with your hand. Use a stick to gently touch them when checking and remove any that are dead. They are blind until the eyes open at 10 days of age.

Leave the young rabbits with the mother. They can be killed for meat from 3 months of age.

Sexing rabbits (knowing the sex)

Knowing what sex the young rabbits are is important because you may want to keep the does and sell or kill the bucks. To sex young animals you look at the area below the anus. In old bucks the scrotum can clearly be seen.

Feeding rabbits

You can buy ready-mixed rabbit feed (pellets) made from grain, plants, minerals and vitamins. However this may be expensive or not available. Rabbits can be fed the following:
· Vegetables such as carrots, sugar beet, manger beet, parsnip, swede, turnip, potato and other root vegetables· Green leaves
· Grains such as oats, wheat, barley and maize
· Dry bread
· The waste skins or tops of vegetables from the kitchen
· Dry sunflower heads (the rabbit will eat the seed)
· Young branches from trees such as acacia
· Bran mash (bran is produced from the milling of wheat or rice)
Feeding during the dry season

As with other animals you must think about what to feed rabbits during the dry season. The following can provide for dry season feeding:
· Hay, preferably from green leafy plants. Bind the plants into bundles and hang them to dry in the wind but avoid putting them in the direct sun. This type of hay is preferable to that made from sun-dried grasses.
· Carrots, beetroot, turnips and other root vegetables can be kept for a long time in dry sand in a bin, barrel or wooden box. Arrange the vegetables in layers separated by dry sand and cover the top with a layer of straw. Another way to keep root vegetables is to place the vegetables in layers with straw between them. The whole pile is covered with straw and then earth. Leave a small hole at the top for ventilation

Feeding during the dry season


Eating the droppings (faeces)

Rabbits produce both hard and soft droppings. It is natural for the rabbit to eat the soft droppings it produces because they contain nutrients and water. When the soft droppings pass through the gut for a second time the nutrients and water can be absorbed (taken into the body). The droppings produced then will be hard.

Water for rabbits

A supply of drinking water is necessary at all times. A suitable water drinker can be made from any plastic bottle. Make one or two holes in the bottom of the cleaned bottle, fill it with water and screw on the top. Place this in a shallow container. This could be used for water for chickens too.

Water for rabbits


Housing rabbits

A small wooden house (hutch) will be sufficient for a buck. You can make hutches to contain more than one rabbit. The hutch must be clean, dry and well ventilated.

Remember that rabbits can be difficult to keep in runs (fenced areas) as they will burrow down and under a fence and escape. They can be kept in enclosed areas if the fencing material is partly buried to stop them burrowing under it.

Housing rabbits


Nesting box

This is nothing more than a cardboard or wooden box or even a basket. It is open only at the top so the mother cannot take the young out of the nest. The nest box should be lined with hay. By the time they are 3 weeks old the young will come out of the nest themselves.

Nesting box


Uses of rabbits

Rabbit meat contains little fat. It is white in colour and is very nutritious as it contains a lot of protein. Like a chicken, one rabbit will provide enough meat for a family meal.

Some breeds of rabbit have long hair which is collected and spun to give wool for clothing. Rabbit skins can be dried and treated to give good pelts (skins with fur) to be used in clothing and other uses.

Rabbit droppings make excellent fertiliser. They contain more nutrients for plants than droppings from other animals and are useful fertiliser for growing vegetables.

II: Health problems of rabbits

It is better to prevent disease in rabbits rather than to have to cure disease. Good feeding and clean housing will guarantee disease free rabbits.
It is easy to recognise a sick rabbit as:
· the eye will be dull
· the coat is rough
· there will be diarrhoea
· it sits in a comer grinding its teeth
Taking the body temperature will show if the rabbit is sick. The normal temperature of a rabbit is 39.3° C.

Learning objectives

After studying this unit you should know:
1 How to handle rabbits.
2 Ear problems in rabbits.
3 Problems with the teeth and toes in rabbits.
4 Problems caused by parasites.
Handling rabbits

To pick up a rabbit put one hand around the bottom of the ears to control the animal and hold the loose skin on the back of the neck. Use the other hand to take the whole weight of the rabbit.

Handling rabbits
Ear mange (ear canker)

This is a very common disease of the ear. It is caused by mites, small parasites which burrow into the skin of the ear canal (inside ear).

The rabbit shakes its head from side to side and rubs its ears against the cage and walls. A yellowish white crust (thick layer) covers the ear canal.

The easiest way to treat this infection is to put a few drops of oil (olive, sesame or sunflower) inside the ear and massage it. Repeat this every day until the condition improves. If you have any powder for ticks and mites you can mix a little with the oil and use it (see R24 Annex 1). See your veterinary officer if the disease continues.

Cages and houses should be kept clean. Wash your hands when you treat a rabbit and before you touch other animals.

Overgrown nails and teeth

The rabbit's nails grow continuously and can sometimes become overgrown. They can be clipped back using nail clippers or pliers. Do not cut too close to the foot.

Rabbits have four front teeth in the upper jaw and two in the lower jaw. The teeth grow continuously but as the animal eats they are worn down. Sometimes the lower and upper teeth do not meet when the mouth is shut. The teeth in this case do not wear down. You will need to cut them with a wire cutter or a pair of pliers.

Overgrown nails and teeth

Problems caused by parasites

Rabbits suffer from fleas which suck the blood and carry disease. Fleas lay their eggs in the cracks and holes in the walls of the housing. Rabbits can be treated with a dusting powder (see R 15 Annex 1) against fleas and the housing should also be thoroughly cleaned and dusted.

Coccidia (very small parasites) in the liver and gut can be a problem especially in animals under 4 months old. They cause diarrhoea which may contain blood and animals lose weight and are pot-bellied. Coccidia can kill many rabbits.

The parasites live in the droppings so hutches and cages should always be kept clean. One teaspoon (5 ml) of iodine in 5 litres of drinking water can be used to help prevent this disease. It should be given to the female rabbit before her young are born.

Rabbits can also suffer from diarrhoea, constipation, abscesses, mastitis and eye infections. Your veterinary officer can advise you about these problems in your rabbits.