Open Access
Research (Published online: 09-12-2021)
3. Improving the knowledge of high school students about zoonotic diseases from pets in Medellín-Colombia
Natalia Uribe Corrales, Karen Velásquez Giraldo, Catalina María Saldarriaga Garcés and Angie Lorena Navarro Giraldo
Veterinary World, 14(12): 3091-3098

Natalia Uribe Corrales: Department of Agricultural Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Lasallian University Corporation (Unilasallista), Caldas, Antioquia, Colombia.
Karen Velásquez Giraldo: Department of Agricultural Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Lasallian University Corporation (Unilasallista), Caldas, Antioquia, Colombia.
Catalina María Saldarriaga Garcés: Department of Agricultural Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Lasallian University Corporation (Unilasallista), Caldas, Antioquia, Colombia.
Angie Lorena Navarro Giraldo: Department of Agricultural Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Lasallian University Corporation (Unilasallista), Caldas, Antioquia, Colombia.

doi: www.doi.org/10.14202/vetworld.2021.3091-3098

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Article history: Received: 23-06-2021, Accepted: 10-11-2021, Published online: 09-12-2021

Corresponding author: Natalia Uribe Corrales

E-mail: nuribe@unilasallista.edu.co

Citation: Corrales NU, Giraldo KV, Garcés CMS, Giraldo ALN (2021) Improving the knowledge of high school students about zoonotic diseases from pets in Medellín- Colombia, Veterinary World, 14(12): 3091-3098.
Abstract

Background and Aim: The "One Health" concept is a global strategy that recognizes that public health is related to animal health and the environment; however, the role of domestic animals and their involvement in the transmission of zoonoses is often underestimated. The aim of the study was to evaluate and improve the knowledge about zoonotic diseases of domestic animals in high school students from Medellín, Colombia.

Materials and Methods: A quasi-experimental intra-subject study was carried out. This study was conducted with 11th-grade students from four schools in Medellín, Colombia. A structured multiple-choice questionnaire was used from March 2021 to May 2021. The research had two phases, first, "naive" knowledge and learning. Then, descriptive, association, and comparative analysis were carried out using absolute and relative frequencies, Pearson's Chi-square test, and MacNemar's test with a value of p<0.05 considered statistically significant.

Results: A research poll from 315 students of four private schools found that feeding their pets with raw food and leftovers cooked for human consumption were common practices; the results also show a lack of knowledge of their pets' immunization deworming status. It was understood that when the students were able to identify at least two symptoms of zoonoses, one route of its' transmission and two preventive measures, we found that only 12.49% of the polled students had proper knowledge of the disease in domestic animals. After conducting an educational strategy, the findings show a general increase in knowledge, leading us to accept that the academic approach was adequate to statistically increase the recognition of symptoms, routes of transmission and preventive measures (p=0.00).

Conclusion: The use of the theoretical lecture is effective to improve the understanding of the concept of transmission of diseases from animals to humans; in addition, the results show an increase of knowledge in high school students of the related symptoms, transmission routes, and preventive measures of zoonoses diseases in the region.

Keywords: cats, diseases, dogs, education, zoonoses.