Summary information

Study title

Human-primate disease transmission in four Ugandan villages

Creator

Gibson, M, University of Bristol

Study number / PID

852986 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-852986 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

As part of a research project investigating emerging infectious disease risk in communities located around Kibale National Park, SW Uganda, data were collected in 2014 and 2015 from 400 households in four Ugandan villages. Survey instruments were designed to query heads of households about the basic socio-demographic composition of each household, the nature and frequency of contact with both wild and domestic animals for individuals within each household, and the nature and frequency of illness, measured symptomatically. In addition, a “name generator” survey was deployed to assess the social networks of individuals by enumerating their closest social contexts within the community. Surveys were translated into the local language (Rutooro) by fluent professional translators then back-translated for verification. Surveys were administered by teams of trained field assistants from the local communities. Data were entered and proof read for accuracy and completeness by trained data managers.HIV-1, the retrovirus that causes pandemic AIDS, entered the human population from wild primates many decades ago. How did this happen? Specifically, what social factors created the conditions that allowed a primate-borne virus to be transmitted to people? This study will attempt to provide answers to these questions by studying present-day interactions between people and wild primates in a "hot spot" of human-primate conflict and contact in western Uganda. It focuses on communities of people who live in close proximity to red colobus monkeys. Decades of research on these primates has revealed that they interact regularly with local people in a variety of contexts, including antagonistic interactions, and that such interactions increase rates of disease transmission between the species. This study will build on this to explore how human social factors underpin "risky" human-primate interactions, employing qualitative and quantitative anthropological approaches to explore...
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Methodology

Data collection period

01/10/2011 - 30/09/2017

Country

Uganda

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Household
Individual

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Numeric

Data collection mode

Data collection involved household census surveys undertaken in 400 households living in 4 villages located within 500 metres of different red colobus subpopulations and previously selected for comparability in size, ethnic origin, and socio-economics near Kibale National Park, SW Uganda (Paige, 2010). Survey instruments were designed to query heads of households about the basic socio-demographic composition of each household, the nature and frequency of contact with both wild and domestic animals for individuals within each household, and the nature and frequency of illness, measured symptomatically. In addition, a “name generator” survey was deployed to assess the social networks of individuals by enumerating their closest social contexts within the community. Surveys were translated into the local language (Rutooro) by fluent professional translators then back-translated for verification. Surveys were administered by teams of trained field assistants from the local communities. Data were entered and proof read for accuracy and completeness by trained data managers.

Funding information

Grant number

ES/J011266/1

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2018

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.

Related publications

Not available