Nearly 59,000 human deaths worldwide are attributable to rabies annually, of which more than a third occur in Africa. In recent years, progress has been made in both action and collaboration including implementation of surveillance and prevention measures. In this review we assess the scale of surveillance, preventive, and control efforts of canine-transmitted human rabies in African countries. We reviewed literature published from 2014 to 2018, retrieved from electronic databases including MEDLINE, Global Index Medicus, BIOSIS, Science Citation Index, and EMBASE. WHO reports, national disease control program reports, and conference proceedings were also reviewed. The database search was conducted using keywords including rabies, control, and prevention. In forty countries (40/54), some level of rabies control and prevention strategy was available while in fourteen (14/54) countries, no specific national control and prevention strategy for human rabies could be retrieved. Thirty-four (34/54) countries utilized the Stepwise Approach towards Rabies Elimination (SARE) tool to monitor the national rabies control efforts—five of these countries were at the lowest tier (0/5) of the SARE scoring system while no country had achieved the highest score (5/5). High burden countries need to step up the implementation of context specific national rabies control, prevention, and monitoring strategies. As a zoonosis, rabies control and elimination require coordination between human and veterinarian health sectors under the “One Health” umbrella and with national master plans on the prevention and control of neglected tropical diseases ending in 2020, the time to act is now.
BackgroundThe Rabies lyssavirus is one of 16 species of the Lyssavirus genus causing fatal encephalomyelitis in humans. Infection usually occurs after a bite by an infected mammal. More than 99% of human rabies deaths worldwide are caused by a canine rabies with children at highest risk of infection. Although rabies has been endemic in the region of Mahajanga in Madagascar for a long time, research evaluating the current situation is still scarce. Here, we conducted a cross-sectional study to describe the dog demography and a survey of dog owners to evaluate rabies vaccination coverage, disease knowledge and measures taken in the districts against rabies in order to inform future interventions in the urban district of Mahajanga in the North West of Madagascar.ResultsA total of 400 dogs were recorded, of which 338 (84.5%) were owned. The vaccine coverage against rabies was at 34.4% (116/338). The reported key barriers to vaccination were lack of financial resources and the lack of geographic access to veterinary services. The transmission route of rabies being dog bites was known to 85.4% of the surveyed dog owners (105/123). Out of 19 reported dog bites, 13 were caused by the owner`s or the neighbour’s dog. 6 out of 19 cases affected children between 7 and 15 years of age. ConclusionMost of the dogs in the urban district of Mahajanga are accessible for preventive vaccination through their owners, but less than one third of the canine population is vaccinated against rabies. Assuming that stray dogs are not vaccinated against rabies, Mahajanga is far from reaching the 70% coverage believed to minimise the spread of the disease. The prioritization of dog owner education, school campaigns that sensitize children on the interactions with dogs and vaccination campaigns for owned dogs in collaboration with local veterinary services has shown success in other settings in Africa and will be crucial for future rabies eradication in Madagascar.
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