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Establishment of a Canine Rabies Burden in Haiti through the Implementation of a Novel Surveillance Program

The Republic of Haiti is one of only several countries in the Western Hemisphere in which canine rabies is still endemic. Estimation methods have predicted that 130 human deaths occur per year, yet existing surveillance mechanisms have detected few of these rabies cases. Likewise, canine rabies surv...

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Autores principales: Wallace, Ryan M, Reses, Hannah, Franka, Richard, Dilius, Pierre, Fenelon, Natael, Orciari, Lillian, Etheart, Melissa, Destine, Apollon, Crowdis, Kelly, Blanton, Jesse D, Francisco, Calvin, Ludder, Fleurinord, Del Rio Vilas, Victor, Haim, Joseph, Millien, Max
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4657989/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26600437
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004245
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author Wallace, Ryan M
Reses, Hannah
Franka, Richard
Dilius, Pierre
Fenelon, Natael
Orciari, Lillian
Etheart, Melissa
Destine, Apollon
Crowdis, Kelly
Blanton, Jesse D
Francisco, Calvin
Ludder, Fleurinord
Del Rio Vilas, Victor
Haim, Joseph
Millien, Max
author_facet Wallace, Ryan M
Reses, Hannah
Franka, Richard
Dilius, Pierre
Fenelon, Natael
Orciari, Lillian
Etheart, Melissa
Destine, Apollon
Crowdis, Kelly
Blanton, Jesse D
Francisco, Calvin
Ludder, Fleurinord
Del Rio Vilas, Victor
Haim, Joseph
Millien, Max
author_sort Wallace, Ryan M
collection PubMed
description The Republic of Haiti is one of only several countries in the Western Hemisphere in which canine rabies is still endemic. Estimation methods have predicted that 130 human deaths occur per year, yet existing surveillance mechanisms have detected few of these rabies cases. Likewise, canine rabies surveillance capacity has had only limited capacity, detecting only two rabid dogs per year, on average. In 2013, Haiti initiated a community-based animal rabies surveillance program comprised of two components: active community bite investigation and passive animal rabies investigation. From January 2013 –December 2014, 778 rabies suspect animals were reported for investigation. Rabies was laboratory-confirmed in 70 animals (9%) and an additional 36 cases were identified based on clinical diagnosis (5%), representing an 18-fold increase in reporting of rabid animals compared to the three years before the program was implemented. Dogs were the most frequent rabid animal (90%). Testing and observation ruled out rabies in 61% of animals investigated. A total of 639 bite victims were reported to the program and an additional 364 bite victims who had not sought medical care were identified during the course of investigations. Only 31% of people with likely rabies exposures had initiated rabies post-exposure prophylaxis prior to the investigation. Rabies is a neglected disease in-part due to a lack of surveillance and understanding about the burden. The surveillance methods employed by this program established a much higher burden of canine rabies in Haiti than previously recognized. The active, community-based bite investigations identified numerous additional rabies exposures and bite victims were referred for appropriate medical care, averting potential human rabies deaths. The use of community-based rabies surveillance programs such as HARSP should be considered in canine rabies endemic countries.
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spelling pubmed-46579892015-12-02 Establishment of a Canine Rabies Burden in Haiti through the Implementation of a Novel Surveillance Program Wallace, Ryan M Reses, Hannah Franka, Richard Dilius, Pierre Fenelon, Natael Orciari, Lillian Etheart, Melissa Destine, Apollon Crowdis, Kelly Blanton, Jesse D Francisco, Calvin Ludder, Fleurinord Del Rio Vilas, Victor Haim, Joseph Millien, Max PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article The Republic of Haiti is one of only several countries in the Western Hemisphere in which canine rabies is still endemic. Estimation methods have predicted that 130 human deaths occur per year, yet existing surveillance mechanisms have detected few of these rabies cases. Likewise, canine rabies surveillance capacity has had only limited capacity, detecting only two rabid dogs per year, on average. In 2013, Haiti initiated a community-based animal rabies surveillance program comprised of two components: active community bite investigation and passive animal rabies investigation. From January 2013 –December 2014, 778 rabies suspect animals were reported for investigation. Rabies was laboratory-confirmed in 70 animals (9%) and an additional 36 cases were identified based on clinical diagnosis (5%), representing an 18-fold increase in reporting of rabid animals compared to the three years before the program was implemented. Dogs were the most frequent rabid animal (90%). Testing and observation ruled out rabies in 61% of animals investigated. A total of 639 bite victims were reported to the program and an additional 364 bite victims who had not sought medical care were identified during the course of investigations. Only 31% of people with likely rabies exposures had initiated rabies post-exposure prophylaxis prior to the investigation. Rabies is a neglected disease in-part due to a lack of surveillance and understanding about the burden. The surveillance methods employed by this program established a much higher burden of canine rabies in Haiti than previously recognized. The active, community-based bite investigations identified numerous additional rabies exposures and bite victims were referred for appropriate medical care, averting potential human rabies deaths. The use of community-based rabies surveillance programs such as HARSP should be considered in canine rabies endemic countries. Public Library of Science 2015-11-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4657989/ /pubmed/26600437 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004245 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wallace, Ryan M
Reses, Hannah
Franka, Richard
Dilius, Pierre
Fenelon, Natael
Orciari, Lillian
Etheart, Melissa
Destine, Apollon
Crowdis, Kelly
Blanton, Jesse D
Francisco, Calvin
Ludder, Fleurinord
Del Rio Vilas, Victor
Haim, Joseph
Millien, Max
Establishment of a Canine Rabies Burden in Haiti through the Implementation of a Novel Surveillance Program
title Establishment of a Canine Rabies Burden in Haiti through the Implementation of a Novel Surveillance Program
title_full Establishment of a Canine Rabies Burden in Haiti through the Implementation of a Novel Surveillance Program
title_fullStr Establishment of a Canine Rabies Burden in Haiti through the Implementation of a Novel Surveillance Program
title_full_unstemmed Establishment of a Canine Rabies Burden in Haiti through the Implementation of a Novel Surveillance Program
title_short Establishment of a Canine Rabies Burden in Haiti through the Implementation of a Novel Surveillance Program
title_sort establishment of a canine rabies burden in haiti through the implementation of a novel surveillance program
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4657989/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26600437
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004245
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