Title
Providing health care to improve community perceptions of protected areas
Author(s)
Chapman, C.A.;van Bavel, B.;Boodman, C.;Ghai, R.R.;Gogarten, J.F.;Hartter, J.;Mechak, L.E.;Omeja, P.A.;Poonawala, S.;Tuli, D.;Goldberg, T.L.
Published
2015
Publisher
ORYX
Abstract
ABSTRACT Impoverished communities often turn to illegal extraction of resources from protected areas to alleviate economic pressures or to make monetary gains. Such practices can cause ecological damage and threaten animal populations. These communities also often face a high disease burden and typically do not have access to affordable health care. Here we argue that these two seemingly separate challenges may have a common solution. In particular, providing health care to communities adjacent to protected areas may be an efficient and effective way to reduce the disease burden while also improving local perceptions about protected areas, potentially reducing illegal extraction. We present a case study of a health centre on the edge of Kibale National Park, Uganda. The centre has provided care to c. 7,200 people since 2008 and its outreach programme extends to c. 4,500 schoolchildren each year. Contrasting the provision of health care to other means of improving community perceptions of protected areas suggests that health clinics have potential as a conservation tool in some situations and should be considered in future efforts to manage protected areas.
Keywords
Ecotourism;health centre;Kibale National Park;mobile clinic;non-timber forest products;people–parks interaction;Uganda

Access Full Text

A full-text copy of this article may be available. Please email the WCS Library to request.




Back

PUB15446