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Using Integrated Bite Case Management to estimate the burden of rabies and evaluate surveillance in Oriental Mindoro, Philippines

BACKGROUND: Despite national elimination efforts, dog-mediated rabies remains endemic in the Philippines. Free provision of post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) through the widespread establishment of Animal Bite Treatment Centers (ABTCs) has improved accessibility; however, the resulting upsurge in PEP...

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Autores principales: Swedberg, Catherine, Miranda, Mary Elizabeth G., Bautista, Criselda, Anderson, David, Basa-Tulio, Marife, Chng, Nai Rui, Cruz, Van Denn D., Kundegorski, Mikolaj, Maestro, Jobin, Manalo, Daria, Maniszewska, Klaudyna, Manzanilla, Duane R., Mazeri, Stella, Mellanby, Richard J., Pablo-Abarquez, Sheryl, Quiambao, Beatriz, Telmo, Shynee Vee M., Trotter, Caroline, Yuson, Mirava, Hampson, Katie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7615207/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37841079
http://dx.doi.org/10.20517/ohir.2023.02
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author Swedberg, Catherine
Miranda, Mary Elizabeth G.
Bautista, Criselda
Anderson, David
Basa-Tulio, Marife
Chng, Nai Rui
Cruz, Van Denn D.
Kundegorski, Mikolaj
Maestro, Jobin
Manalo, Daria
Maniszewska, Klaudyna
Manzanilla, Duane R.
Mazeri, Stella
Mellanby, Richard J.
Pablo-Abarquez, Sheryl
Quiambao, Beatriz
Telmo, Shynee Vee M.
Trotter, Caroline
Yuson, Mirava
Hampson, Katie
author_facet Swedberg, Catherine
Miranda, Mary Elizabeth G.
Bautista, Criselda
Anderson, David
Basa-Tulio, Marife
Chng, Nai Rui
Cruz, Van Denn D.
Kundegorski, Mikolaj
Maestro, Jobin
Manalo, Daria
Maniszewska, Klaudyna
Manzanilla, Duane R.
Mazeri, Stella
Mellanby, Richard J.
Pablo-Abarquez, Sheryl
Quiambao, Beatriz
Telmo, Shynee Vee M.
Trotter, Caroline
Yuson, Mirava
Hampson, Katie
author_sort Swedberg, Catherine
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Despite national elimination efforts, dog-mediated rabies remains endemic in the Philippines. Free provision of post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) through the widespread establishment of Animal Bite Treatment Centers (ABTCs) has improved accessibility; however, the resulting upsurge in PEP demand is not sustainable, and human rabies deaths continue. Dog vaccination coverage also remains inadequate, and it is unclear whether surveillance is effective. METHODS: Here, we used Integrated Bite Case Management (IBCM) to collect enhanced rabies surveillance data in Oriental Mindoro Province over a 3-year period (2020-2022). Adapting a probabilistic decision tree model, we estimated the burden of rabies, evaluated surveillance performance, and analyzed the costs and benefits of current rabies prevention and control practices in the province. RESULTS: The incidence of bite patients receiving PEP was high in Oriental Mindoro Province (1,246/100,000 persons/year), though < 3% of presenting patients were deemed high-risk for rabies exposure (24/100,000 persons/year). Using a decision tree model, we estimated that around 73.8% of probable rabies-exposed patients sought PEP (95% Prediction Interval, PrI: 59.4%-81.1%) and that routine surveillance confirmed < 2% of circulating animal rabies cases, whereas IBCM resulted in a nearly fourfold increase in case detection. Furthermore, we estimated that an average of 560 (95% PrI 217-1,090) dogs may develop rabies annually in the province, equating to 3-5 cases per 1,000 dogs per year. On average, 20 to 43 human deaths were averted by PEP each year in Oriental Mindoro at an annual cost of $582,110 USD (i.e., $51.44 USD per person) or $20,190 USD (95% PrI $11,565-79,400) per death averted. CONCLUSION: While current practices for PEP provisioning in the Philippines have improved access, a large proportion of people exposed to rabies (> 26%, 95% PrI 18.8%-40.1%) are still not seeking healthcare. Integrating an intersectoral surveillance system, such as IBCM, into national policy could greatly improve case detection if well implemented, with further benefits extending to guidance for PEP administration, potentially reducing unnecessary expenditure on PEP, and situational awareness to inform control of rabies through mass dog vaccination.
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spelling pubmed-76152072023-10-14 Using Integrated Bite Case Management to estimate the burden of rabies and evaluate surveillance in Oriental Mindoro, Philippines Swedberg, Catherine Miranda, Mary Elizabeth G. Bautista, Criselda Anderson, David Basa-Tulio, Marife Chng, Nai Rui Cruz, Van Denn D. Kundegorski, Mikolaj Maestro, Jobin Manalo, Daria Maniszewska, Klaudyna Manzanilla, Duane R. Mazeri, Stella Mellanby, Richard J. Pablo-Abarquez, Sheryl Quiambao, Beatriz Telmo, Shynee Vee M. Trotter, Caroline Yuson, Mirava Hampson, Katie One Health Imprement Res Article BACKGROUND: Despite national elimination efforts, dog-mediated rabies remains endemic in the Philippines. Free provision of post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) through the widespread establishment of Animal Bite Treatment Centers (ABTCs) has improved accessibility; however, the resulting upsurge in PEP demand is not sustainable, and human rabies deaths continue. Dog vaccination coverage also remains inadequate, and it is unclear whether surveillance is effective. METHODS: Here, we used Integrated Bite Case Management (IBCM) to collect enhanced rabies surveillance data in Oriental Mindoro Province over a 3-year period (2020-2022). Adapting a probabilistic decision tree model, we estimated the burden of rabies, evaluated surveillance performance, and analyzed the costs and benefits of current rabies prevention and control practices in the province. RESULTS: The incidence of bite patients receiving PEP was high in Oriental Mindoro Province (1,246/100,000 persons/year), though < 3% of presenting patients were deemed high-risk for rabies exposure (24/100,000 persons/year). Using a decision tree model, we estimated that around 73.8% of probable rabies-exposed patients sought PEP (95% Prediction Interval, PrI: 59.4%-81.1%) and that routine surveillance confirmed < 2% of circulating animal rabies cases, whereas IBCM resulted in a nearly fourfold increase in case detection. Furthermore, we estimated that an average of 560 (95% PrI 217-1,090) dogs may develop rabies annually in the province, equating to 3-5 cases per 1,000 dogs per year. On average, 20 to 43 human deaths were averted by PEP each year in Oriental Mindoro at an annual cost of $582,110 USD (i.e., $51.44 USD per person) or $20,190 USD (95% PrI $11,565-79,400) per death averted. CONCLUSION: While current practices for PEP provisioning in the Philippines have improved access, a large proportion of people exposed to rabies (> 26%, 95% PrI 18.8%-40.1%) are still not seeking healthcare. Integrating an intersectoral surveillance system, such as IBCM, into national policy could greatly improve case detection if well implemented, with further benefits extending to guidance for PEP administration, potentially reducing unnecessary expenditure on PEP, and situational awareness to inform control of rabies through mass dog vaccination. 2023-08-31 /pmc/articles/PMC7615207/ /pubmed/37841079 http://dx.doi.org/10.20517/ohir.2023.02 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) International license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, for any purpose, even commercially, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
spellingShingle Article
Swedberg, Catherine
Miranda, Mary Elizabeth G.
Bautista, Criselda
Anderson, David
Basa-Tulio, Marife
Chng, Nai Rui
Cruz, Van Denn D.
Kundegorski, Mikolaj
Maestro, Jobin
Manalo, Daria
Maniszewska, Klaudyna
Manzanilla, Duane R.
Mazeri, Stella
Mellanby, Richard J.
Pablo-Abarquez, Sheryl
Quiambao, Beatriz
Telmo, Shynee Vee M.
Trotter, Caroline
Yuson, Mirava
Hampson, Katie
Using Integrated Bite Case Management to estimate the burden of rabies and evaluate surveillance in Oriental Mindoro, Philippines
title Using Integrated Bite Case Management to estimate the burden of rabies and evaluate surveillance in Oriental Mindoro, Philippines
title_full Using Integrated Bite Case Management to estimate the burden of rabies and evaluate surveillance in Oriental Mindoro, Philippines
title_fullStr Using Integrated Bite Case Management to estimate the burden of rabies and evaluate surveillance in Oriental Mindoro, Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Using Integrated Bite Case Management to estimate the burden of rabies and evaluate surveillance in Oriental Mindoro, Philippines
title_short Using Integrated Bite Case Management to estimate the burden of rabies and evaluate surveillance in Oriental Mindoro, Philippines
title_sort using integrated bite case management to estimate the burden of rabies and evaluate surveillance in oriental mindoro, philippines
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7615207/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37841079
http://dx.doi.org/10.20517/ohir.2023.02
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