HIV/AIDS, artisanal fishing and food security in the Okavango Delta, Botswana
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Date
2007Author
Ngwenya, B.N.
Mosepele, K.
Publisher
Elsevier www.elsevier.com/locate/pceType
Published ArticleMetadata
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Generally, rural households pursue all year round natural and non-natural resource-based livelihood systems to diversify these
options in order to cope with risks emanating from a range of shocks and stressors. Artisanal fishing in the Delta is not only a major
livelihood option but also a source of food security. This paper is based on analysis of primary data collected from a survey of 248 subsistence
fishers’ households through simple random sampling in 22 villages in the Delta. The overall objectives of the survey were to
assess the general prevalence of HIV/AIDS in the Ngamiland district of Botswana, to investigate potential effects of AIDS-related stressors,
particularly chronic illness on artisanal fishing activities, and to assess implications towards food security. Results from this study
indicate that HIV prevalence rates for pregnant women attending antenatal clinics in the Delta are approximately 30% and are related to
factors such as marriage, education, and employment. Despite this relatively high prevalence percentage, most of the affected households
do not have adequate access to HIV/AIDS support facilities. Support services are provided on the basis of population size and/or status
of the settlement (i.e. urban, urban village, rural or remote). Therefore, since about 50% of the Delta’s population lives in settlements of
less than 500 people, they receive health services indirectly through major population centres whose capacity to deliver timely HIV/AIDS
services is limited. This disproportionate access to HIV/AIDS services disadvantages the majority of fishing communities in the Delta,
and may affect their ability to fish. Moreover, about 53% of sampled households had cared for a continuously ill person/s (CIP’s) in the
last 5 years, out of which approximately 29% felt that this seriously impacted fishing activities. These serious impacts included sale of
family assets, depletion of savings, and switching or abandoning fishing activities. Subsequently, household food security is seriously
affected because fish provides a significant proportion of food to CIP households where approximately 55% of households get their food
from fish products. During food shortages, CIP households resorted to a hierarchy of strategies which included cutting down on meals or
reducing meal portions, looking for paid work, gathering wild fruit, asking for food from relatives, selling livestock, and getting social
assistance. In conclusion, artisanal fishing is a natural safety net which constitutes an important buffer for households affected by HIV/
AIDS-related stressors in the Okavango Delta. Access to fish helps these households mitigate potentially adverse impacts such as deterioration
into chronic poverty.
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