Wednesday 25 September 2013

SMS Disease Reporting System Changes Surveillance and Monitoring Approach in the country

Reporters from Vanimo, East Sepik Province near the Indonesian Border 
THE National Agriculture and quarantine Authority (NAQIA) is now able to send reports of sick and dead animals around the country much faster using a new short messaging service (SMS) system. Thanks to the Support of the Australian Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF) and AusAID, the ICT Section and the Animal Health section of NAQIA.

The SMS reporting is the first animal diease reporting project to be developed in the country.The project involves sending SMS messages through mobile phones to report any sick or dead animals much faster.

NAQIA officers, provincial DPI livestock officers, including NGOs stationed in strategic locations all over PNG, can now send messages using mobiles phones.

The messages sent are automatically recorded on an online database, monitored by NAQIA. Project coordinator and acting animal health programme manager for field services Dr Estelo Quimbo said reports collated in the past seven days from around Papua New Guinea are sent to their online database every Monday for analysing and for possible field disease investigations. “Äs a result of using this new SMS reporting system, sending and investigating disease reports can now be done in the shortest possible time,” he said. “I can say that we can now monitor on what is happening on the ground in the most remote areas of PNG and collate all these SMS reports in our online database.”

This project was developed in 2012 and was implemented in January 2013 by NAQIA in partnership with the Australian Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF) and AusAID.

NAQIA’s ICT manager Aaron Uforty said: “We are utilising the mobile phone network and installing the application in mobile phones so that officers reporting can use the mobile phone to send reports just like sending text message. However, you don't do alot of typing, you answer yes or no and select options and enter numbers and you are done. The messages sent are automatically recorded on an online database, monitored by NAQIA."

Project coordinator and acting animal health programme manager for field services Dr Estelo Quimbo said reports collated in the past seven days from around Papua New Guinea are sent to their online database every Monday for analysing and for possible field disease investigations. One of these successful reports sent was the recent New Castle Disease outbreak in Vanimo, East Sepik Province, PNG along the Indonesian Boarder.

Prepared for media by NAQIA Publications: Gary Fagan

Wednesday 18 September 2013

Young Pacific Islanders learn to utilise social media network to share Agricultural Knowledge

Training Participants for the Web 2.0 Training
Young men and women from around the Pacific which included Fiji, PNG, Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Kiribati, Samoa, Tonga, Nauru, Palau and Vanuatu gathered at the Tanoa International Hotel in Nadi, Fiji to learn how they could be able to share Agricultural Knowledge on how to improve farming technics in the pacific.

The training was facilitated by the Secretariat of the Pacific community (SPC) in collaboration with funding from the Technical Centre for Agriculture and Rural Cooperation (CTA). With the ever increasing trend of technology around the world in information dissemination, and the high use of social networks such as Facebook, twitter, google plus and linkedIn, information can be disseminated and shared easily.

Participants where very grateful for the training and believed with the training and the network they have created at the training would last and that the main goal and objective behind the training which sharing of agricultural knowledge will come into fruition. 

The other important things the participants learned was the use of blogs to share information and also it was a way in which the knowledge can be stored in reverse chronological order similar to a diary for future generations.


Tuesday 17 September 2013

New Technic on utilising Pigs waste for farming

Pig manure generally is rich in potash and when well humified, it is best useful to root crops, especially celeriac, potassium-hungry leeks and potatoes. Pigs are mainly rooting animals that feed on roots they dig up.
However the thing most people do not like is the smell of it. but hey wait! you can make the smell go away.
This is how you do it:
  • fill the pig stye with leaves and grass work the pigs to use
  • and move your pigs inside 
  • when the pigs excrete, the manure is absorbed and kept dry
  • the mixture of pig manure and the leaves and grass and spread them out on your garden
now you are done....