| Literature DB >> 27314463 |
Florence Ribadeau-Dumas, Florence Cliquet, Philippe Gautret, Emmanuelle Robardet, Claude Le Pen, Hervé Bourhy.
Abstract
In 2015, countries in western Europe were declared free of rabies in nonflying mammals. Surveillance data for 2001-2013 indicate that risk for residual rabies is not 0 because of pet importation from countries with enzootic rabies. However, the risk is so low (7.52 × 10(-10)) that it probably can be considered negligible.Entities:
Keywords: cats; communicable disease control; dogs; humans; rabies; rabies virus; risk; travel; viruses; western Europe
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27314463 PMCID: PMC4918150 DOI: 10.3201/eid2207.151733
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Transport mode and origin of 21 pets brought from countries enzootic for rabies to western Europe, 2000–2013
| Transport mode | No (%) rabid pets | Country of origin (no.) | Country of diagnosis (no.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Road | 11 (52) | Morocco (9), Croatia (1), Bosnia and Herzegovina (1) | France (8), Germany (2), Spain (1) |
| Air | 7 (33) | Morocco (4), Azerbaijan (1), Sri Lanka (1), The Gambia (1) | Germany (2), Belgium (1), France (2), The Netherlands (1), UK (1) |
| Unknown | 1 (5) | Morocco (1) | Switzerland (1) |
| None | 2 (10) | Dogs from France (secondary cases) (2) | France (2) |
*NA, not applicable. †We considered only countries in western Europe with a population >1 million persons. ‡PA, calculated risk that a given pet is rabid on a given day in a country in western Europe relative to pet transport. §PAC, calculated risk that a given cat is rabid on a given day in a country in western Europe relative to pet transport. ¶PAD, calculated risk that a given dog is rabid on a given day in a country in western Europe relative to pet transport. #PAD was lower if the dog had no signs of rabies (9.25 x 10−10–1.03 x 10−10 for dogs with no signs of rabies and 6.44 x 10−9–6.44 x 10−6 for dogs with signs of rabies assuming that 90%–99.99% had no signs of rabies on a given day).
FigureEuropean Union (EU) regulations (no. 998/2003 and no. 576/2013, http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:32013R0576) on movement of cats, dogs, and ferrets, 2003–2013. Before 2003, national rules applied (e.g., animal checked at destinations, rabies vaccination, animal identification, quarantine, health certification). EC, European community. *http://ec.europa.eu/food/animal/liveanimals/pets/list_third_en.htm. †A pet passport is required for pets transported in the EU. A health certificate provided by an official veterinarian is mandatory for pets transported from outside the EU.