Akogun et al. International Journal for Equity in Health 2012, 11:5
http://www.equityhealthj.com/content/11/1/5
RESEARCH
Open Access
Febrile illness experience among Nigerian nomads
Oladele B Akogun1*, Minnakur A Gundiri2, Jacqueline A Badaki3†, Sani Y Njobdi2†, Adedoyin O Adesina1† and
Olumide T Ogundahunsi4†
Abstract
Background: An understanding of the febrile illness experience of Nigerian nomadic Fulani is necessary for
developing an appropriate strategy for extending malaria intervention services to them. An exploratory study of
their malaria illness experience was carried out in Northern Nigeria preparatory to promoting malaria intervention
among them.
Methods: Ethnographic tools including interviews, group discussions, informal conversations and living-in-camp
observations were used for collecting information on local knowledge, perceived cause, severity and health seeking
behaviour of nomadic Fulani in their dry season camps at the Gongola-Benue valley in Northeastern Nigeria.
Results: Nomadic Fulani regarded pabboje (a type of “fever” that is distinct from other fevers because it “comes
today, goes tomorrow, returns the next”) as their commonest health problem. Pabboje is associated with early rains,
ripening corn and brightly coloured flora. Pabboje is inherent in all nomadic Fulani for which treatment is therefore
unnecessary despite its interference with performance of duty such as herding. Traditional medicines are used to
reduce the severity, and rituals carried out to make it permanently inactive or to divert its recurrence. Although
modern antimalaria may make the severity of subsequent pabboje episodes worse, nomads seek treatment in
private health facilities against fevers that are persistent using antimalarial medicines. The consent of the household
head was essential for a sick child to be treated outside the camp. The most important issues in health service
utilization among nomads are the belief that fever is a Fulani illness that needs no cure until a particular period,
preference for private medicine vendors and the avoidance of health facilities.
Conclusions: Understanding nomadic Fulani beliefs about pabboje is useful for planning an acceptable community
participatory fever management among them.
Background
When compared to the urban populations, rural communities are poorly served by the health system, but in
comparison with nomads, the gap between nomads and
rural settled communities is even wider [1].
First, the formal health system appears ill-adapted for
extending services to constantly mobile communities of
nomads [2] and local authorities often disregard the existence of nomads with respect to health service delivery.
For example, in Southwestern Nigeria, guinea worm case
detection scouts “forgot” to include visits to nomad camps
[3], and ivermectin distribution in the control of onchocerciasis, often marginalized nomadic Fulani settlements [4].
Located on the outskirt of settled communities, nomadic
* Correspondence:
[email protected]
† Contributed equally
1
Common Heritage Foundation, No.1 Bishop Street, Box 5124, Yola, Nigeria
Full list of author information is available at the end of the article
camps are often ignored to the extent that less than 3% of
children below 2 years may benefit from full immunization
service in some areas [5].
Although disproportionately more exposed to infectious
diseases such as malaria, nomads remain isolated from the
ongoing malaria management campaigns [6,7]. Accounting for more than 10% of Africa’s overall disease burden,
malaria is responsible for up to 20% of maternal deaths in
health facilities in sub-Saharan Africa [8]. In Nigeria,
malaria remains the most important cause of childhood
morbidity and mortality. In 2000, malaria accounted for
63.4% of all reported diseases, with 50% of the population
having at least one malaria episode leading to between 30
and 50% inpatient admissions and 50% outpatient visits to
health facilities [9].
The typical Fulani household has a headman, his
wives, children and dependents [10]. About 15 household units aggregate in an area to form a wuro (camp)
© 2012 Akogun et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in
any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Akogun et al. International Journal for Equity in Health 2012, 11:5
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and many wuro constitute a gure. Nomadic Fulani
dependence on herbal remedy and private medical outlets in health seeking is well documented.
Despite current Government efforts to reduce the disease burden through distribution and promotion of
insecticide treated nets (ITN) usage, simple diagnostic
tools, behaviour change communication, appropriate
chemotherapy, intermittent preventive treatment and
community management of febrile illnesses, access to
these services remain a challenge to the nomads. One of
the major health issues in Africa is how beliefs about
health and illness are used in health care delivery since
the concept of illness is informed by cultural identity
[11]. For example the Fulani express the sense of difference between them and other groups through the manner in which they acknowledge illness. Being Fulani
means perseverance, strength of character, discipline and
providing leadership over others. The lack of understanding of their cultural experiences with malaria is a hindrance to integrating them into the malaria control
programme. Yet if not addressed, nomads will remain an
epidemiologically significant group when the disease is
eventually reduced to a level below public health importance among settled populations. A study on the malaria
illness experiences of nomadic Fulani communities that
camp in the valleys of rivers Benue and Gongola of
Northeastern Nigeria during the dry season was conducted prior to development of an appropriate intervention programme.
Methods
The study was carried out between November 2003 and
April 2004. A mixed approach combining traditional biological techniques with ethnographic methods was used.
Informal conversations, unstructured interviews, group
discussion, and living-in-camp techniques were used for
collecting information from nomads about their febrile
illness experiences. These were then complimented with
household and malaria prevalence surveys.
Study population
The nomadic Fulani camp communities of interest were
concentrated at the confluence of rivers Benue and Gongola in Northeastern Nigeria (Latitude 9°13’N and 9°46’N
and Longitude 11°30’E and 12°10’E) spreading out over
five Local Government Areas (LGAs). An extensive
Savanna Sugar farm project irrigation scheme situated in
the area provides abundant vegetation all year round.
With an open vegetation of shrubs and herbaceous plants
much favoured by animals, the area serves as a major dry
season stop-post for nomads in their north-south migratory cycle. The camp is a settlement where the nomads
make temporary shelter. The camp varies in size depending on the number of households inhabiting it. A camp
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often consists of several groups of concentric tents inhabited by a nomadic community. Several such communities
may be located in a particular place within 5 kilometers
of each other under a clan leader [10]. The clan is a subgroup within the larger Fulani tribe that claim descent
from a common ancestor or share a perceived kinship.
The clan often takes names of towns such as Jahun, Kiri,
Bodewa to denote its origin or that of its founding ancestor. The sharing of the stipulated common ancestry is the
symbol of the clan’s unity. The migratory routes are clan
based and the group passes through the symbol of the
clan (such as Kiri for the Kiri Fulani clan) during a cycle
of migration. It is not uncommon to find within the same
clan, another set of groups that attempt to distinguish
themselves from the other group members as a subclan
based on an agnate of the same symbolic progenitor [10].
Members of the same clan usually camp in a particular
area occupying sometimes about 3 kilometers radius, and
share the same routes and movement timing.
Three main nomadic Fulani clans use the BenueGongola valley for their dry season stopover. At the peak
of the dry seasons, forty-eight camps (estimated population
of 12,000) dotted the entire area according to their clans.
The Kiri undergo a migration within a radius of 30-100
kilometers and have a sedentary phase of old people, the
Jahun migrate over a longer distance but use the valley on
an annual basis while the Bororo (Bodyel clan) are crossborder nomads travelling over 800 km and only returning
to the valley once in every three years. Most of the camps
had moved in and out of the valley in the past 15 to
20 years. Members of the Kiri clan claim that as far as they
could recall their great grandfathers had camped in the
valley as well.
While the Kiri and the Jahun may spend up to 5
months in the valley the Bororo hardly spend 3 months
before moving on. Camps of particular clans arrive and
leave the valley at different times thus providing opportunity for collecting data from different members of the
same clan throughout the dry season (November to
May). A typical nomadic Fulani household unit consists
of a set of concentric tents (built with reed, millet or
corn stalks) in a semi-circle overlooking where animals
are tethered. It is composed of a man, his sons, younger
brothers, first cousins and other dependents. A household is a unit of economic activity headed by a jom
wuro, or household head. The basic settlement of the
Fulani is the wuro (camp) that is composed of 12-20
household units and headed by a Jauro or bulama. Each
wuro is part of a cluster of several other wuro in an area
belonging to the same clan. A collection of wuro is
called the gure over which the eldest among brothers is
the Ardo or clan leader. The Ardo wields the greatest
influence in nomad leadership hierarchy. The Ardo has
responsibility for coordinating movements, mediating
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disputes within the clan, negotiating with settled local
community leaders or ordering a combat. The Savanna
Sugar Irrigation farm project encouraged a set of camp
sites with semi-permanent tents where in recent times
the elderly nomadic Kiri Fulani and their children
remain while the youth herd the animals within a radius
of 50 and 100 kilometers. The elderly Kiri now combine
mediatory and negotiation roles with trading in livestock
at the local markets which may give rise to the sedentarization of the next generation. They do not cultivate
crops at the moment. The Kiri keep goats and sheep in
addition to cattle while the Jahun and Bororo keep only
cattle.
An organization with previous experience working with
nomads was consulted to learn how the nomads may be
approached and their participation in the research negotiated. A local guide with experience carrying out veterinary services among the nomads and with whom the
nomads had developed some trust was assigned to the
team for the purpose of introducing and guiding the team
through the social and cultural norms of the nomadic
Fulani.
The Sarkin sanu or Sarkin Fulani (an informal position
for a Fulani elder who serves as a liason for nomads at the
local government office or at the traditional court of the
local chief) was contacted and a list of Ardo was compiled
and appointments made to visit. Every contact team visit
had at least 3 research team members comprising culture
specialist, facilitator, and a note-taker, one of whom is
either a veterinary or health personnel. Diaries and field
notes were used for documenting information and
impressions.
intended duration in their current location and willingness
to participate in a study on febrile illness. The team
returned to the Ardo at least three more times to offer
specific follow up health and veterinary services while continuing informal conversations, gaining visibility and
acceptance and developing useful contact for the subsequent stage. Services were limited to those within the professional competence of the Community Health Extension
worker and the Veterinary Assistant in the team and
include diarrheal and fever management and offer of referral support. The Ardo was encouraged to invite other
elders of the clan (particularly the Jauro, the camp leaders)
to the meetings. This provided additional opportunity for
informal conversations with other elders of the clan and
for documenting their knowledge and febrile illness
experience. The conversations sought information on
knowledge of local terminology, vocabularies and usages
about febrile illnesses and malaria. Specific information on
febrile illness recognition and classification, response to
perceived cases of severe illness as well as how the health
system served them was also sought. The local guide’s role
diminished with every subsequent visit and finally stopped
when sufficient rapport had developed between the Ardo
and the team. The provision of basic health and veterinary
services during the study was very helpful in trustbuilding.
With the assistance of the Ardo, camps were selected
from each of the community of camps. Clan representation and duration in the valley were important considerations in camp selection. The Ardo facilitated entry to
the camps and introduced the team and the objective of
the study to the Jauro.
Team training
Formal interviews and discussions
Members of the research team had previous experience in
community interactive research and were fluent in Hausa
and/or Fulfulde, the language of the Fulani. The research
team received an orientation on Fulani culture. Since tape
recording was not used at the onset to avoid suspicion and
misunderstanding that are likely to occur during the first
meeting, team members were trained on note taking techniques. In order to ensure quality, field notes were jointly
reviewed by all the team members that were present
during particular interaction.
Information from the informal contacts and conversations with clan elders was used for developing in-depth
interview and group discussion guides. Group discussions were held with women (young, mothers, grandmothers), herders (young males) and children. In-depth
interviews were held with camp leaders, local specialists
(such as traditional healers). Specific questions on clinical signs, causality, meanings and perceived incidence
rates were asked.
Much of the interaction was either at dawn or late in the
evening in order to synchronize with their daily routine.
The nomadic Fulani follow a very firm routine that commenced at about 4 hours (GMT+1) and ended at about 21
hours (GMT+1) when the animals had been tethered and
the daily schedule completed. Informants were selected to
represent relevant diversity in each community (age, gender, location and class). In order to avoid interview fatigue
specific but few questions were asked about experience
with febrile illness to the exclusion of other aspects that
was discussed with other informants.
Contact and Informal conversations with clan leaders
During the first visit to the Ardo, the local guide introduced the team and initiated informal conversations about
the health of their animals and their family. Conversations
were then directed to febrile illnesses, access to insecticide
treated nets and antimalaria medicines before the objective
of the visit was introduced. In order to ascertain that the
studied population would be around long enough to complete the study, inquiries were made about the clan’s
Akogun et al. International Journal for Equity in Health 2012, 11:5
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The data from the camps were used for developing
household survey questionnaires that were administered
to four members (male and female parent of under-five
child, unmarried herders) of the household where formal
interviews were not held. This allowed the collection of
information from this category of people whose experiences would not otherwise be represented in the study,
and to check for consistency and generalizability of information from the other sources. The data were then analyzed and the derived information used for developing an
observation and informal conversation guides.
Live-in experience
In order to understand the context within which information was obtained, three households with at least three
under-five children and that are willing to host the team
were selected from each clan for a 7-day live-in-camp
experience. Typical family decision-making processes with
respect to care-giving, health and illness behavior such as
gender roles, extended family influence and age were
documented in the process. Attention was given to family
care, recognition of febrile illnesses, home remedies
(orthodox or traditional), health service usage, nursing
care and recuperation. The 3-member team comprised a
health and veterinary assistant led by a facilitator (teams
A, B, C). The team members shared the same tent built by
the women and interacted within limits of the culture.
Each member of the team selected a particular skill to
acquire during the live-in experience. For example the
woman member spent much of the time with the eldest
woman in the camp but interacted with other women participating in their everyday tasks (learning to milk the cow,
prepare yoghurt or millet meal). Similarly, a male member
of the team spent much of the time with the herders and
participated in herding and tendering the animals. The
third member shared the time with the elders of the clan
and where decorum permitted, accompanied the Ardo in
some of the missions to the local community and markets,
and to resolve misdemeanors at the local court. These
offered opportunity for obtaining information on their
migration and fever management practices. The arrangement also allowed the researchers to be as unobtrusive as
much as possible. Notes were made by each team member
at intervals. Every evening the team shared information
and compared observations. The evening discussions also
provided opportunity for identifying issues that required
further understanding.
Malaria prevalence survey
A subteam (D) carried out a malaria prevalence survey
among under-five year old camp members using a rapid
diagnostic test kit, ParaHit f developed by Program for
Appropriate Technology (PATH) and manufactured by
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ICT Diagnostics, South Africa. ParaHit f is an immunodiagnostic test that provides in vitro qualitative test for the
detection of P. falciparum (Pf)-specific Histidine Rich Protein II [12,13]. Rapid diagnostic test kits are useful for the
prompt malaria diagnosis in community surveys [14]. The
current study is preliminary to an investigation on malaria
management among children under the age of five years
since they are especially vulnerable.
The quantitative approach was used to assess malaria
prevalence in children and cultural epidemiological indicators: frequency of self-reported experience of various diseases in order to estimate the perception of disease
burden and agreement on causation. Qualitative approach
assessed the domains of knowledge, causation, severity,
perceived burden and pattern of treatment seeking
response to illness. Quantitative data were entered into
EPI INFO (version 3.3.2) and analyzed with IBM SPSS
Statistics version 18 while qualitative data were processed
with Atlas Ti.
Results
Shrubs and herbaceous plants characterize the Benue river
valley attracting nomads to the limited grazing areas particularly during the dry season. Although 28 camps were
counted during the study, the team was informed that
there were probably 160 camps at different locations with
a total estimated population of about 10,000 nomads at
the time. The initial realization was that the term Bororo,
which non-Fulani people erroneously use to describe all
Fulani nomads only apply to a particular clan. Those who
did not belong to the clan felt offended when erroneously
referred to as Bororo. The research team talked to more
than 72 nomads during the qualitative data collection
while 97 respondents participated in the survey. More
males participated in the survey (60.8%) than females
(39.2%). The malaria survey involved 691 under-five
children.
The test kit detected only Plasmodium falciparum
parasite antigen in blood. Infection was similar in both
male (37.0%) and female (36.6%) but not between agegroups (Table 1).
Infection was lowest among children that were less
than 12 months but highest among two and four-year
olds. Clan was not an important factor in infection with
malaria parasite
Clans, camps and lifestyle
Altogether 72 individuals participated in either informal
conversations, group discussions or in the key informant
interviews. The women and children sleep inside the tents
while the men sleep outside, unprotected from mosquito
bites. The Bororo children (5-12 years) sleep among the
animals to “prevent mosquito bites”. Irrespective of the
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Table 1 Prevalence of malaria infection among under-5 children
No. Examined
% Infected
Significance
P < 0.05, Chisqr: 18.6, Significant
Age (years)
≤1
237
27.4
2
151
45.5
3
131
34.1
4
172
45.1
Sex
Male
349
37.0
Female
342
36.6
clan camp members’ duties and interactions are segregated
by age and sex (elderly, married male, unmarried male,
married female, unmarried female) and in-laws could not
socially mingle. Responsibilities and duties are well
defined. Women take care of food, children, and the tents
while the young herd the animals. The elders serve as liaison to other clans and to the local community population.
They gather news about pasture, potential conflict and
patterns of local politics that may affect them. Among the
Bororo and the Kiri, herders would spend about one hour
studying in Arabic at the end of the day’s work.
Among the Jahun and the Kiri, young girls (7-11 years)
participate in herding. The elders and women patronize
the nearest markets while the young tend the animals.
Only the very young and infirm are left in the camp during
the day. Information gathering and communication is very
critical to the nomadic lifestyle. The Ardo spends a significant proportion of the time in the court of the sedentarized local community chief or in the market scooping
information that could be useful for the safety of camp
members and animals. A camp could relocate within a few
minutes of a decision to do so. The Ardo is responsible for
the decision to relocate. The use of mobile handheld
phones is very common among the nomads for enhancing
communication between the herders and the Ardo. The
team (A, B) witnessed the relocation of five camps comprising thousands of heads of cattle to a position of about
25 kilometers upstream within an hour to avoid a local
crisis which turned out to be a ruse.
The Bororo youth (both male and female) plait and
adorn their hair and clothes with brightly coloured ornaments. A radio (with which they are linked to the outside
world) is an indispensable part of dressing as they herd
animals in the fields. The Jahun are witty, inquisitive but
extremely wary of outsiders.
Camp live-in observations posed some challenge as
words went round that the team was interested in health.
At the onset many ailments were brought to the team.
However the splitting of the team helped reduce the
number as it became known that they would only meet
the health personnel member of the team in the night or
early in the morning. The provision of basic health care
P > 0.05, Chisqr: 0.013, Not Significant
could pose a major obstacle to obtaining information on
health among nomads using the live-in approach. However this is compensated by a rapid built-up of trust and
rapport and enrichment of the quality of information collected during lay conversations and discussions while in
the camp.
Very few childhood fevers were managed in the camp
during the live-in period. On two occasions the household
head brought antibiotics purchased from the local market
for the treatment of diarrhea in a 7-year old. Although we
were told that this was a common practice, the particular
action was as a result of our presence otherwise we noted
that attempts were made to exhaust other home remedies
before purchasing modern medicines from local medicine
vendors. The team witnessed four cases of childhood fever
management while the health team member was with the
herders and could not return to camp for the night. The
observations were corroborated with information from
conversations and discussions. The household head on
receiving information about a member of the household
being ill will assess the severity. The opinions of other
men and in some cases suggestions of the old women
were taken to account. Often the household head will not
make known his decision but would leave the camp only
to return later in the day with medicines for the treatment
of the ill person. In exceptional cases the individual may
be taken to a health facility but the team did not witness
this. The team had an opportunity to observe a boka
(medicine man) manage a non-malaria ailment. The
women seemed to have a greater influence on the decision
of the household head than acknowledged. They often
influence the household head by the manner in which the
ailment is described. In order to influence the household
head’s decision they often give examples of those with
similar illness in some other place and how or where it
was managed. Although the decision-maker often ignored
the women the eventual action seemed to have the influence of the older women who served as nurse and administer medicines to children and other women.
It was much easier to observe the herders than activities in the camp. The presence of a guest had very little
effect on their activities. The herders easily developed
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rapport and were eager to share skills, information and
knowledge once in the field. In the camp they appeared
shy and withdrawn in the presence of the older men. The
rapport with team member in the field and the comradeship was much stronger than what the female team member witnessed among the women. Except the illness was
so severe as to prevent herding the herders were often
left to resolve any health issues they may encounter while
herding. They freely purchased whatever medicines they
wanted and used them at will even in the absence of any
ailment. On many occasions, the herders would purchase
vials of injectable chloroquine or antibiotics, break it with
the teeth and swallow the content. It was believed to be
more effective than pills in the absence of an injection.
There was very little regard to expiration or distinguishing between antibiotics and antimalaria and would sometimes take multiple medicines at the same time. The
herders would chew herbs and roots of various plants as
well as modern medicines for different reasons: to keep
warm, prevent or halt an emergent fever, or colds.
Cultural epidemiology of fever
Nomads perceived Pabboje, a type of fever that recurs
on alternate days as the most common health problem
with 87.6% reporting that they had within the past six
months (Table 2).
They acknowledged other ailments of concern to
nomads as ringworms (19.7%) and diarrhoea (17.3%),
Cough (dambi), and foot cracking (pe-i).
They described symptoms of pabboje as hotness of the
body, fatigue, headache, shivering, pains in the joints, diarrhoea, vomiting and loss of appetite. Pabboje is nascent in
the Fulani but can be triggered into active form when one
drinks fresh milk during early rains, eats or perceives the
aroma of fresh maize being roasted or cooked, or observes
brightly coloured agents (red or yellow) such as maize
flowers (Table 3).
They noted that however, the frequency and severity
differs between individuals. While some have a single
episode annually others have up to four, at onset or end
of the rain and others at both seasons.
Table 2 Frequency of diseases in the camps
Self - reported diseases
Number interviewed Frequency (%)1
Pabboje
374
87.6
Ringworms/Skin problems
84
19.7
Diarrhoea and abdominal pain 74
17.3
Back and joints pain
56
13.1
Dysentery
38
8.9
Worms
27
6.3
Cough
Others
16
3
3.7
0.7
Number of respondents
427
100.0
1
Proportion reporting they had the condition
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Table 3 Factors that trigger pabboje (N = 97)1
Factors/agents
Frequency (%)
Fresh milk during the early rains
71.1
Fresh maize during the early rains
48.5
Roasted maize in early rains
36.1
Sight or aroma of maize
11.3
Consumption of maize
6.2
Greeting a person with pabboje
4.1
Others (e.g. bright colours, flowers)
20.6
1
multiple responses allowed
The symptoms of pabboje include weakness of the
body, naadaago (stretching of the body), feeling cold
and desire to sit in the hot sun, lack of appetite. Other
diseases may exhibit similar symptoms but pabboje is
unique because it gives intermittent respite to enable
one carry out one’s duties.
Once it did not go away on the next day, we begin to
suspect other types of djonte which could be caused by
witches or evil spirits but we must wait for a week to be
certain it is not pabboje —informal conversation, Ardo,
Bororo
A group of Fulani women articulated the generally
held view
Pabboje is natural with every Fulani and is not caused
by anything. It is harmless but when one eats, smells or
sees something pabboje does not like it wakes up and gives
a little trouble which disturbs ones work.—Focus group
discussion, married women.
My pabboje becomes unhappy when I drink milk during
the early rains. Many people don’t have pabboje during the
dry season although they drink milk at that time. It can
only be because the milk we drink in the rainy season is
different. Cattle graze on fresh grass in the rainy season the
milk from such cattle may be the one that wakes up the
sleeping pabboje in the Fulani. —Indepth interview, healer
and Jauro, Bororo
Perceived severity and Patterns of Distress
Most Fulani nomads had experienced at least two
annual episodes of pabboje but they do not associate it
with death. Although pabboje was merely a condition
for being a Fulani, and not an illness, nevertheless it was
mentioned as cause of depression since it interfered
with performance of normal tasks and with carrying out
one’s responsibilities in the camp.
Pabboje starts with general body weakness and a desire
to sit in the hot sun. One will then have naadaago (a
kind of body stretching that happens when one has just
woken up), the body will be hot, intense headache but
one will feel cold and begin to shiver. Some people will
vomit.——Key informant Interview, Young male herder,
Jahun
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Pabboje behaves differently in different people. May be
this is because of what wakes it up. I don’t know. In
some people, pabboje will be so mild that it does not
interfere with herding while it will be very severe in
others.–Informal conversation, herder, Bororo
When I used to go herding, my pabboje would not come
in the morning but will allow me take the animals far
afield then it will start when the sun is on top of the head,
at about noon. I would then have to return home. I know
the following day it would not come so I would go herding
the animals. But on the third day, I would wait in the
tent till noon for it to come and surely it would come.
That is how I used to manage the three and sometimes
four episodes that I used to have every year.- Informal
conversation, Ardo, Kiri
The distinguishing symptom of pabboje is that act of
coming on days one, three, five before dis-appearing.
Djonte is like pabboje that does not go away but that
remains persistent
Djonte is very dangerous. It will not allow you to herd
the animals at all.
—Informal conversation, Male herder, Kiri
The nomads would ignore fever until the third recrudescence. However if symptoms persisted beyond the 7th
day, it was classified as djonte (fever) due to other causes
and not pabboje. Nomads are relieved when djonte is due
to pabboje and perceive other types of fever with much
anxiety.
However, its interference with duties has made it
necessary to curtail its recurrence or to reduce its severity
to a level that normal activities such as herding could
continue. Some traditional method of preventing the
recurrence of pabboje is, at dawn after the first recurrence to take a handful of lebol (butter from cow milk),
venture far into the bush, and place the lebol between the
leaf of barkeje (a shrub with broad leaves), fold the leaf
and then let go of it immediately. One should neither
look back nor ever return to the particular spot. The next
person that passes would take the illness from the victim
and thus hinder subsequent episodes from emerging.
Another approach is to cut an un-ripe pawpaw fruit into
four equal parts and soak them in milk that is been prepared for pendiidam (yoghurt) and allow to ferment. The
pawpaw would then be removed and the yoghurt served
to the patient to drink. This will reduce the severity of
pabboje. Cotton leaves may also be boiled and drunk in
order to reduce the severity of pabboje. Yet, another antidote is to take a handful of guinea corn with the left
hand and bury it under dingaali (a woody plant with
broad bitter leaves) on the second day of pabboje. This
action will bury the pabboje within, and prevent it from
“waking up” on the third day. In some cases pabboje may
remain buried forever unable to wake up even when
triggered.
Page 7 of 10
Until recently, I did not know any modern treatment
for pabboje. I would wait until the episodes of my pabboje has come and passed— Informal conversation,
Ardo Kiri
Some women keep antimalaria purchased from local
vendors at home for treating pabboje in children.
At the store we just ask for medicine for ciwonfulani
(Fulani problem). We give two tablets. If the child is too
young, we give syrup. The child vomits and then becomes
well again. Pabboje starts in the night or early in the
morning–Focus group discussion, Young mothers, Kiri
The elderly believe that the treating pabboje had
“made it more severe” and many would rather not use
any modern medicines in cases of pabboje.
Modern drugs, like quinine for treating pabboje disappeared then there was nivaquine and later chloroquine
injection which was very effective with some people. However, many of us do not treat pabboje because modern
drugs will only make pabboje go away for a short time
only to return with more virulence. The only drug I did
not hear people complain about is the one your group
brings to us.——Indepth interview, Ardo, Jahun
Pabboje is distinguished from djonte because the former recurs while the latter does not. Whenever someone
has djonte it will be assumed to be pabboje except when
proven otherwise. The main proof is for it not to go away
and comeback again. There are other types of djonte
which the nomads consider very dreadful since they
interfere severely with normal activities. If it is not pabboje, then it is caused by evil spirits or witches and
should be treated by placing leaves of baobab on red hot
charcoal and inhaling the smoke.
One such djonte is djonte kippindirde considered the
most precarious of the djonte and can only be removed
by traditional healers since it is caused by hendu (evil
spirits) or mutte’en or karama’en (witches).
Buudi or Buule (plural) may also cause djonte. Fever
due to buudi is milder than pabboje. Although the victim feels weak and has hot body there will neither be
shivering, or feeling cold. Although buudi may subside
and escalate; it does not follow any regular pattern like
pabboje. Buudi can be felt when the inflamed part is
touched.
Besides djonte, pabboje, other diseases that nomads
regard as intrinsic waiting to be externally triggered are
Doiru (tuberculosis), peewol (rheumatism), and sadaure
(leprosy or dermatitis).
Nomads take measures to protect themselves from
mosquitoes because they are a nuisance, suck blood, and
may cause itching at the point of bite. Insecticide treated
nets, clothing (especially when asleep), herbs burned to
create smoke and plant repellents are used to prevent
man-mosquito contact. Herders hang certain plants
around the body while in the field and place some at
Akogun et al. International Journal for Equity in Health 2012, 11:5
http://www.equityhealthj.com/content/11/1/5
different parts of the tent to repel mosquitoes. Among
the Bororo, children sleep among the large animals such
as cattle to prevent mosquito bite. An 8-year old nomadic
Fulani child spoke for his colleagues
We sleep among the cows so that the mosquitoes do
not see us to bite. The cattle are big and the mosquitoes
bite them instead.
Decision-making and health service utilization
Since the live-in exercise did not yield much information from observed practices, the team depended on
conversations and the survey results. Although most
nomadic Fulani (79.4%, N = 97) knew the location of
the nearest health facilities, only a few (5.8%) visited or
knew someone who had visited any in the past six
months. Self-treatment with a variety of antimalaria
drugs and antibiotics is very common particularly
among the young male (herders). We observed them
purchase antibiotics and vials of injectable medicines
displayed on a mat laid on the market floor, break the
vial open with the teeth and swallow the content.
The mother of a febrile child would inform the father
whose responsibility it was to decide the course of
action. When an adult was severely ill and unable to
communicate, the most elderly male would decide the
course of action to be taken. When illness is severe
enough as to be life threatening one in ten women
would take a child to the health facility without the consent of the father. Male children informed their fathers
when they fell ill while female children notified mothers.
If the head of a family was not available, the brother or
other person to whom the household was entrusted
would take decisions in his absence. However, no action
would be taken until the 7th day when the type of
djonte is determined. If fever persisted without any
recurrent pattern it would be assumed to be severe and
treated as such. Once a decision was made the father
would allocate resources (money, donkey and advice) to
enable the mother implement it. It is in rare cases that a
father would take the child to the health facility.
In recent times, nomadic Fulani patronise private
health facilities but hardly public ones. The reasons
were similar irrespective of clans or camp. Payment condition (49.5%), distance from camp (42.3%) and the
politeness of the health care provider are the most
important considerations when making a decision to
patronise a health facility. Nomads spend as much as $8
in the purchase of antimalaria medicines most often (of
unknown and doubtful origin) from itinerant vendors at
local markets (Table 4).
Nomads are very much concerned about their inability
to benefit from regular health service and expressed
willingness to participate in the distribution of insecticide treated nets (ITN) and in the administration of
Page 8 of 10
Table 4 Reasons for preferring one source of intervention
to the other (N = 97)1
Reasons
Frequency
(%)
Payment condition is flexible and can be negotiated
49.5
Distance: the place is not far from campsite
42.3
Time spent in the facility is short and convenient
38.1
Service is good and relief is obtained
Staff of facility are friendly and respect the Fulani
30.9
22.7
Type of drug and mode of dispensing can be
negotiated
22. 7
Services and supplies are always available
20.6
Others
2.0
1
multiple responses allowed, vertical comparison only
antimalaria for the management of fevers in the camps.
However they expressed concern about time and duration of training as well as how participation would affect
their nomadic life. If required they would be keen to
contribute to the purchase of drugs, to support the
camp own resource person (CORP) during training and
to compensate for time if the acquired skills would be
used solely for the benefits of fellow camp members.
Discussion
That majority of the camps had moved in and out of the
same area for more than 15 years confirm the predictability of migratory patterns of nomadic communities.
Their highly developed communication skills and
respect for hierarchy are advantages that health authorities could take for developing appropriate intervention
programme that nomads would accept.
The recorded prevalence of malaria in the survey is
not surprising. A previous study in Northeastern Nigeria
reported up to 58.7% prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum [15]. Malaria transmission in northeastern
Nigeria is seasonal and reaches the peak at the onset
(May/June) and end (September/October) of rainy season when anopheline mosquito breeding sites are abundant. Although the breeding sites dry up in most parts
of Northeastern Nigeria during the intensely hot and
dry months (February/April), focal transmission abound
in isolated sites such as water holes and perennial river
beds. Nomads are exposed to this focal but intense
transmission when they camp near water holes in consideration of the need of their animals. Unlike most
sedentary communities, nomadic populations are therefore exposed to malaria transmission throughout the
year and thus deserve special attention by control programmes. In Mali, disproportionately low prevalence of
malaria among Fulani tribe when compared with other
tribes had been associated with an unidentified genetic
factor [16]. Such association is difficult to infer in this
study.
Akogun et al. International Journal for Equity in Health 2012, 11:5
http://www.equityhealthj.com/content/11/1/5
The nomadic Fulani have a highly well developed theory of causation of febrile illnesses and are able to distinguish between different types of fevers. The
perception of pabboje as different from other types of
djonte but personal to the Fulani nomads is probably, as
Imperato [17] explained, a means of coping with the disease. Whereas pabboje provided respite for them to
meet their obligations and duties to their family and animals (pulaaku) other types of djonte do not and are
therefore dreaded. This is perhaps the reason for regarding pabboje as a problem of the nomadic Fulani population. The intermittent distress due to pabboje still
provides some respite for performing one’s duty as
Fulani. The fact that it is regarded as nascent, requiring
a trigger factor to make it come alive probably explains
the focus of traditional intervention which is to negotiate the return of pabboje to its dormant status without
recurring or to reduce its severity but not completely
clearing it.
The gradual acceptance of treatment of pabboje indicates a change in awareness that malaria control intervention programmes need for developing a control
programme for the nomads. The market which serves as
a key meeting point for collection and dissemination of
information among nomads could be exploited by the
health authority for interactive communication.
Nomads will most likely continue to patronize the private health facility abandoning the public health facility
to sedentary community populations as observed in
another study in Nigeria [18]. It is unlikely that communities could be convinced to accept the sharing of limited consumable health resources with temporary guests
whose population and health needs may often overwhelm that of the local population. In Nigeria allocation
of resources and services are carefully computed and
shared between spheres of governance at the federal,
state, local government area and community according
to set criteria which takes into consideration the census
of the community. The nomads are not often included
at the planning stage. Although communication technology-driven empowerment combined with simple rapid
diagnostic tools and creative packaging of medicines
may increase access to fever management services, it is
yet to attract the attention of potential investors [19]
The most plausible strategy is an intervention that is
nomadic community-managed, and that exerts minimal
pressure on pre-allocated resource of the sedentary
community.
The community directed intervention (CDI) approach
that has been made popular in the control of onchocerciasis in Africa is probably the most viable option for
increasing access of the nomads to malaria intervention
services [20,21]. The approach requires that the health
authorities and partners negotiate the means by which
Page 9 of 10
the community will participate in intervention to ensure
ownership of intervention process and outcome. First
the nomads’ migratory movement and settlement patterns within a health district should be identified,
described and a plan developed for approaching and
negotiating their participation in malaria control. The
cultural epidemiological description of the disease is
also useful for planning intervention strategies particularly the development of information, education and
communication strategies.
Conclusions
Despite the view expressed by some nomads that the
use of Western medicine might have worsen the disease,
majority attest to the relief offered by Western medicine
and accept it if it is made accessible to them. The community directed intervention strategy is the basis for
increasing that accessibility. The challenge before the
health system is to apply the community directed intervention approach that has worked well with settled
communities to the nomadic lifestyle.
Acknowledgements
The investigation was supported by grant number A10626 to OA from the
Special Pro-gramme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases, World
Health Organization (WHO/TDR). We are grateful to Abu Adamu Yahaya who
facilitated the contact with the nomads, to Ardo Subairu, Tuga, Nduruwa
and their clans for enthusiastic collaboration and to Neha Sha of The Johns
Hopkins University who reviewed the study tools at the early stage.
Author details
1
Common Heritage Foundation, No.1 Bishop Street, Box 5124, Yola, Nigeria.
2
Federal University of Technology, Yola, Nigeria. 3Adekunle Ajasin University,
Akungba, Akoko, Nigeria. 4Special Programme for Research and Training in
Tropical Diseases, World Health Or-ganization, Geneva 27, Switzerland.
Authors’ contributions
OBA conceived, designed and coordinated the study; MAG and JAB
reviewed the protocols and improved the intellectual content while SN and
AOA coordinated prevalence survey, analyzed and interpreted the data, OTO
contributed to the design and reviewed the final manuscript for intellectual
quality. The protocol had the ethical approval of the National Health
Research Ethics board of Nigeria and the ethics review committee of the
World Health Organization. All authors read and approved the final
manuscript.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Received: 12 October 2010 Accepted: 31 January 2012
Published: 31 January 2012
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doi:10.1186/1475-9276-11-5
Cite this article as: Akogun et al.: Febrile illness experience among
Nigerian nomads. International Journal for Equity in Health 2012 11:5.
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