ELP - Poultry and Small Ruminant Health Advisor - GAPNET | Ghana
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ELP - Poultry and Small Ruminant Health Advisor - GAPNET | Ghana

Posted Sep 3rd, 2024

VWB is recruiting Poultry and Small Ruminant Health Advisors for the Emerging Leaders Program to volunteer with our partner, GAPNET, in Ghana. 

Download Volunteer Placement Description PDF

Volunteer Placement Details

Position Title: Poultry and Small Ruminant Health Advisor (Emerging Leaders Program)

Country: Ghana

Location: Upper East region and Greater Accra

Partner Organization: Ghana Poultry Network (GAPNET)

Duration: 3 months (May-August 2025)

Start Date: Early May, 2025

Pre-departure Training: VWB/VSF will provide training orientation.

Eligibility: Canadian Citizens and Permanent Residents of Canada only

Language: English (essential) 

Academic Requirements: Currently enrolled in Veterinary School or recent graduate from DVM program, within the last five years  

Fundraising: VWB/VSF encourages each volunteer to raise funds towards the organization’s operations.

Volunteer Support Package

VWB offers you an incredible experience to take part in an international volunteer experience where you will expand your personal and professional skills while contributing to global development. VWB commits to supporting you throughout your volunteer journey and will cover the majority of the costs involved in being an overseas volunteer, including: 

  • Return airfare to placement country 
  • Pre-departure training
  • In-country orientation upon arrival in country of placement 
  • Return airfare to placement country 
  • Visa/permit costs 
  • The cost of required for vaccinations and anti-malarial medication 
  • Overseas emergency travel health insurance 
  • A monthly living allowance (MLA) that will be paid into the volunteer’s bank account in Canada. The MLA is designed to be sufficient to cover simple housing, basic food requirements, and other typical monthly living expenses. 
  • Debrief after the placement  

Placement Goals and Responsibilities

As a Small Ruminant and Poultry Health Advisor volunteer, you will support GAPNET as they promote animal health throughout the communities they work in. You will help strengthen the knowledge and capacity of GAPNET staff and Community Animal Health Workers (CAHWs). In this role you will:

  • Provide trainings for Community Animal Health Workers (CAHWs)
  • Participate in vaccination campaign of small ruminants against PPR 
  • Train small ruminant farmers in basic housing for ruminants  
  • Train small ruminant farmers in disease recognition, prevention, and control 
  • Train small ruminant farmers on the importance of vaccinations against PPR on their farms 
  • Train rural poultry farmers on the importance of Newcastle disease vaccination and basic poultry housing  
  • Provide advice on treating internal and external parasites in sheep and goats  
  • Participate in vaccination campaign against rabies in pets

Required Experience and Skills

  • Current veterinary student or recent graduate from a DVM program, within the last 5 years 
  • Background and knowledge in small ruminant production and health management  
  • Disease recognition in small ruminants 
  • Ability to train farmers in disease control and feed management in small ruminants 
  • Ability to create learning plans and resources for a variety of audiences 
  • Effective cross-cultural communication skills 
  • Knowledge of Ghanaian livestock sector 
  • Commitment to the principles of volunteer cooperation and familiarity with participatory approaches to development, including the promotion of gender equality, good governance and environmental sustainability 

Working Conditions

  •  Some travel required 
  • Frequent driving on gravel roads 

Our Commitment 

Veterinarians Without Borders/Vétérinaires sans Frontière is an equal opportunity employer and values the diversity of our team.

We are committed to inclusive and equitable employment practices and strive to create a workplace that supports diversity, equity, and inclusion. VWB/VSF Canada welcomes applications from all qualified candidates, including members of racialized groups, Indigenous peoples, women, persons with disabilities, and persons of any sexual orientation or gender identity.

Please let us know if you require an accommodation and we will work with you to ensure an equitable hiring process. Thank you for your interest in VWB/VSF Canada.

Safeguarding Policy

Veterinarians Without Borders works for, and with, communities in need to foster the health of animals, people and the environments that sustain us. In order to create equitable, sustainable development around the globe, the work of our staff, volunteers, and partners must align with our organizational values. Through our programs, VWB promotes respect, honesty, and professional excellence and we have a zero tolerance policy for any harassment, coercion, sexual exploitation or abuse of any kind. Successful volunteer applicants will be required to follow our Volunteer Code of Conduct and Standard Operating Procedures (SOP). Volunteers will also be required to submit a criminal record check.  


VWB is a signatory to the Cooperation Canada Leaders’ Pledge on Preventing and Addressing Sexual Misconduct. The pledge represents the shared commitment as Canada’s global development and humanitarian leaders to ensure the full implementation of practices and policies that will protect and respond to our own staff, volunteers and the communities we serve. We are committed to creating safe and respectful workplaces and programs that promote gender equality and are free from gender-based violence, including by addressing and responding to all abuse of power, holding people to account, and protecting the vulnerable. Read the full pledge. 
 
 

About the Project: VETS

Volunteers Engaged in Gender Responsive Technical Solutions (VETS), funded through the Volunteer Cooperation Program at Global Affairs Canada, will engage 190 volunteers to work with local partner organizations in Ghana, Kenya, Senegal, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam.

Volunteers will help create integrated animal health systems to increase the livelihoods and household nutrition of small-scale farmers. The VETS program utilizes the skills of volunteers to build local partner capacity to support community members, primarily women, to reduce poverty. Through improved production of livestock and crops, volunteers help improve family income and nutrition.

The VETS program is built around the One Health concept, which recognizes that the health of people, animals, and the natural environment are interconnected. This project promotes the production of more and better food and increased incomes from livestock, all the while promoting land rehabilitation and conservation for sustainable development.

Learn More About The VETS Project

About Veterinarians Without Borders

In the global south, more than 90 percent of food animals are raised by subsistence farmers. However, small-scale livestock producers, the majority of whom are women, have very limited access to quality and affordable animal health services.

Aside from the risks associated with the loss of valuable livestock that provides important protein and/or income for low-income households, zoonotic diseases that can be passed from animals to humans offer a very real threat to human health on a wider scale.

Veterinarians Without Borders/Vétérinaires sans frontières (VWB/VSF) works for and with communities in need to foster the health of animals, people, and the environments that sustain us. VWB/VSF works nationally and internationally to train animal health workers, increase food security, and improve animal and public health.

VWB/VSF provides overseas volunteer placements for veterinarians and other animal and public health professionals.

Learn More About VWB

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  • My voluntary assignments in Ghana for the past three years have dramatically improved animal production in terms of reducing mortality and increasing the size of the herd/flock.
    - Joseph Ansong-Danquah

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