| Literature DB >> 28290915 |
N Fenelon1, P Dely1, M A Katz2, N D Schaad2, A Dismer2, D Moran3, F Laraque2, R M Wallace4.
Abstract
Haiti has the highest human rabies burden in the Western Hemisphere. There is no published literature describing the public's perceptions of rabies in Haiti, information that is critical to developing effective interventions and government policies. We conducted a knowledge, attitudes and practices survey of 550 community members and 116 health professionals in Pétionville, Haiti in 2013 to understand the perception of rabies in these populations. The majority of respondents (85%) knew that dogs were the primary reservoir for rabies, yet only 1% were aware that bats and mongooses could transmit rabies. Animal bites were recognized as a mechanism of rabies transmission by 77% of the population and 76% were aware that the disease could be prevented by vaccination. Of 172 persons reporting a bite, only 37% sought medical treatment. The annual bite incidence rate in respondents was 0·9%. Only 31% of bite victims reported that they started the rabies vaccination series. Only 38% of respondents reported that their dog had been vaccinated against rabies. The majority of medical professionals recognized that dogs were the main reservoir for rabies (98%), but only 28% reported bats and 14% reported mongooses as posing a risk for rabies infection. Bites were reported as a mechanism of rabies transmission by 73% of respondents; exposure to saliva was reported by 20%. Thirty-four percent of medical professionals reported they would wash a bite wound with soap and water and 2·8% specifically mentioned rabies vaccination as a component of post-bite treatment. The majority of healthcare professionals recommended some form of rabies assessment for biting animals; 68·9% recommended a 14-day observation period, 60·4% recommended a veterinary consultation, and 13·2% recommended checking the vaccination status of the animal. Fewer than 15% of healthcare professionals had ever received training on rabies prevention and 77% did not know where to go to procure rabies vaccine for bite victims. Both study populations had a high level of knowledge about the primary reservoir for rabies and the mode of transmission. However, there is a need to improve the level of knowledge regarding the importance of seeking medical care for dog bites and additional training on rabies prevention for healthcare professionals. Distribution channels for rabies vaccines should be evaluated, as the majority of healthcare providers did not know where rabies vaccines could be obtained. Canine rabies vaccination is the primary intervention for rabies control programmes, yet most owned dogs in this population were not vaccinated.Entities:
Keywords: Dog bites; Haiti; rabies; socioeconomic
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28290915 PMCID: PMC5426290 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268816003125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Demographics of community members participating in a rabies knowledge, attitudes, and practices survey, Pétionville, Haiti, 2013
| Community members ( | Healthcare professionals ( | Haiti National Statistics* | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | |||||
| Median age, years (range) | 35 (18–90) | − | Median age, years (range) | 37 (23–72) | − | 22·5 years |
| Median annual household income (range) | 4274 USD (1200–14 400) | − | – | – | 1800 USD | |
| Sex | ||||||
| Male | 239 | 43·5 | Male | 15 | 14·2 | 50·1% |
| Female | 311 | 56·5 | Female | 91 | 85·8 | 49·9% |
| Education | ||||||
| Illiterate | 50 | 9·1 | – | – | 22% of Haitians have a secondary degree or higher | |
| Primary school | 102 | 18·5 | – | – | ||
| Secondary school | 318 | 57·8 | – | – | ||
| University | 75 | 13·6 | – | – | ||
| No response | 5 | 0·9 | – | – | ||
| Occupation | ||||||
| Unemployed | 132 | 24·0 | Nurse | 72 | 67·9 | − |
| Professor | 20 | 3·6 | Doctor – social services | 3 | 2·8 | |
| Student | 76 | 13·8 | Doctor – general practice | 18 | 17·0 | |
| Merchant | 123 | 22·4 | Doctor – specialist | 13 | 12·3 | |
| Other employment | 199 | 36·2 | – | – | ||
| Households owning pets | ||||||
| Yes | 229 | 41·6 | Yes | 51 | 48·1 | - |
| Number of dogs | 239 | − | Number of dogs | 51 | ||
| Rabies vaccinated | 91 | 38·1† | Rabies vaccinated | 13 | 25·5† | |
| Number cats | 214 | − | Number cats | 0 | ||
| No | 321 | 58·4 | No | 55 | 51·9 | |
* Source: World Fact Book [6].
† Percentage calculated as the quotient of rabies-vaccinated dogs and the total number of dogs owned by the survey respondents.
Knowledge of rabies transmission and prevention of community members and healthcare professionals, Pétionville, Haiti, 2013
| Rabies knowledge | Community members ( | Healthcare professionals ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | |||
| What animals can transmit rabies?* | ||||
| Dog | 468 | 85·1 | 104 | 98·1 |
| Cats | 163 | 29·6 | 75 | 70·8 |
| Other (bats, mongoose) | 8 | 1·5 | 45 | 42·5 |
| In what ways can rabies be transmitted to people?* | ||||
| Bite from an animal | 416 | 75·6 | 78 | 73·6 |
| Contact with saliva on open wounds | 10 | 1·8 | 21 | 19·8 |
| Consumption of raw meat from rabid animals | 3 | 0·5 | 14 | 13·2 |
| Don't know/No answer provided | 110 | 20·0 | 5 | 4·7 |
| Can post-bite vaccination prevent a person from developing rabies? | ||||
| Yes | 394 | 71·6 | 91 | 85·8 |
| No | 113 | 20·5 | 15 | 14·2 |
| Don't know | 43 | 7·8 | 0 | 0 |
| Do you know where to go to receive rabies vaccination if bitten by a suspected rabid animal? | ||||
| Yes | 48 | 8·7 | – | – |
| No | 502 | 91·3 | – | – |
| Can a person with rabies be cured after symptom onset? | ||||
| Yes | 301 | 54·7 | 52 | 49·1 |
| No | 87 | 15·8 | 42 | 39·6 |
| Don't know | 162 | 29·5 | 12 | 11·3 |
| Is vaccination of pets important for preventing human disease? | ||||
| Yes | 437 | 79·5 | 104 | 98·1 |
| No | 51 | 9·3 | 2 | 1·9 |
| Don't know | 62 | 11·3 | 0 | 0 |
| Can a person with rabies transmit the disease to other people? | ||||
| Yes | – | – | 48 | 45·3 |
| No | – | – | 48 | 45·3 |
| Don't know | – | – | 10 | 9·4 |
| Should anyone with a bite from a suspected rabid animal be considered for rabies vaccination? | ||||
| Yes | – | – | 91 | 85·8 |
| No | – | – | 15 | 14·2 |
| Does your institution have a protocol to guide in the treatment of bite victims? | ||||
| Yes | – | – | 13 | 12·3 |
| No | – | – | 93 | 87·7 |
| Do you know where to obtain rabies vaccine for a bite victim? | ||||
| Yes | – | – | 24 | 22·6 |
| No | – | – | 82 | 77·4 |
* Multiple responses allowed, totals may not add up to 100%.
Attitudes and practices towards bite events of community members, Pétionville, Haiti, 2013
| Attitudes towards bites from suspected rabid animals ( | Practices of persons bitten by a suspected rabid animal | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | ||||
| What would you do if bitten by a suspected rabid animal?* | What did you do after being bitten by the suspected rabid animal?* | ||||
| Nothing | 3 | 0·5 | Nothing | 63 | 36·6 |
| Wash the wound with soap and water | 33 | 6·0 | Washed the wound with soap and water | 14 | 8·1 |
| Seek help in a clinic or hospital | 499 | 90·7 | Sought help in a clinic or hospital | 63 | 36·6 |
| Self-administer antibiotics | 3 | 0·5 | Self-administered antibiotics | 1 | 0·6 |
| Visit a traditional healer | 0 | 0·0 | Visited a traditional healer | 6 | 3·5 |
| Don't know/Declined to answer | 20 | 3·6 | Don't know/Declined to answer | 25 | 14·5 |
| What would you do with an animal that had bitten you or a family member?* | What did you do with the animal that had bitten you?* | ||||
| Nothing | 55 | 10·0 | Nothing | 138 | 80·2 |
| Observe the animal for 14 days for signs of illness | 44 | 8·0 | Observed the animal for 14 days for signs of illness | 15 | 8·7 |
| Determine the rabies vaccination status of the animal | 41 | 7·5 | Determined the rabies vaccination status of the animal | 2 | 1·2 |
| Kill the animal | 256 | 46·5 | Killed the animal | 28 | 16·3 |
| Take the animal to a veterinarian for rabies assessment | 73 | 13·3 | Took the animal to a veterinarian for rabies assessment | 3 | 1·7 |
| Don't know/Declined to answer | 81 | 14·7 | – | – | |
| Did you receive rabies vaccination after the bite? | |||||
| Yes | 54 | 31·4 | |||
| No | 110 | 64·0 | |||
| Don't know | 8 | 4·7 | |||
* Multiple responses allowed, totals may not add up to 100%.
Annual and lifetime dog-bite incidence in community members, Pétionville, Haiti 2013
| Community respondents ( | Life-years* | Primary bites reported ( | Lifetime bite rate† | Annual bite incidence rate (bites/100 life-years)‡§ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age group, years | |||||
| 18–29 | 266 | 6251 | 80 | 30·0% | 1·28 |
| 30–39 | 121 | 4174·5 | 43 | 35·5% | 1·03 |
| 40–49 | 66 | 2937 | 27 | 40·9% | 0·92 |
| 50–59 | 50 | 2720 | 18 | 36·0% | 0·66 |
| ⩾60 | 47 | 3031·5 | 4 | 8·5% | 0·13 |
| Sex | |||||
| Male | 239 | 8365 | 81 | 33·9% | 0·97 |
| Female | 311 | 10 885 | 91 | 29·3% | 0·84 |
| Total | 550 | 19 114 | 172 | 31·3% | 0·90 |
* Life-years were calculated as the product of the community respondents and the median of the age range.
† Lifetime bite rate was calculated as the quotient of the number of primary bites and the number of community respondents.
‡ Annual bite incidence rate was calculated as the quotient of the primary bites and the life-years represented by the study participants. The incidence rate is given as the number of bite events/100 life-years.
§ Because only primary bite events are represented in this table the lifetime bite rate and annual bite incidence rate represent a conservatively low estimate.
Characteristics of persons bitten by suspected rabid animal, Pétionville, Haiti, 2013
| % | ||
|---|---|---|
| Survey respondents ever bitten by a suspected rabid animal | 172 of 550 | 31·3 |
| Average number of bites (range) | 1·1 (1–3) | |
| What animal was responsible for the bite?* | ||
| Dog | 161 | 93·6 |
| Cat | 20 | 10·8 |
| Age group (years) | ||
| 18–29 | 80 | 46·5 |
| 30–39 | 43 | 25·0 |
| 40–49 | 27 | 15·7 |
| 50–59 | 18 | 10·5 |
| ⩾60 | 4 | 2·3 |
| Sex | ||
| Men | 81 | 47·1 |
| Women | 91 | 52·9 |
| Where were you when bitten by the animal?* | ||
| My home | 29 | 16·9 |
| Neighbour's home | 85 | 49·4 |
| On the street | 58 | 33·7 |
| On what part of your body were you bitten?* | ||
| Lower limb | 145 | 84·3 |
| Upper limb | 20 | 11·6 |
| Chest | 6 | 3·5 |
| Face | 2 | 1·2 |
* Multiple responses allowed, totals may not add up to 100%.
Practices of healthcare professionals when treating bite wound victims, Pétionville, Haiti, April 2013
| Survey questions | % | |
|---|---|---|
| Have you ever received training on rabies control and prevention? | ||
| Yes | 15 | 14·2 |
| No/Unknown | 91 | 85·8 |
| Do you need to alert local authorities when you treat a bite victim? | ||
| Yes | 101 | 95·3 |
| No/Unknown | 5 | 4·7 |
| Do you discuss rabies with patients seeking treatment for an animal bite? | ||
| Never | 39 | 36·8 |
| Sometimes | 53 | 50·0 |
| Often | 9 | 8·5 |
| Almost always | 5 | 4·7 |
| What treatment do you recommend to patients bitten by an animal suspected of having rabies?* | ||
| None | 0 | 0 |
| Immediately wash the wound with soap and water | 36 | 34·0 |
| Administer a tetanus vaccine | 19 | 17·9 |
| Administer antibiotic treatment | 6 | 5·7 |
| Provide rabies post-exposure prophylaxis | 3 | 2·8 |
| Don't know/Declined to answer | 42 | 39·6 |
| What do you recommend to patients bitten by unfamiliar animals when your institution does not have rabies vaccine in supply?* | ||
| Nothing | 1 | 0·9 |
| Tell the patient to return home | 1 | 0·9 |
| Refer the patient to another centre where vaccine is available | 63 | 59·4 |
| Call another institution to see if the vaccine is available | 11 | 10·4 |
| Alert the health authorities in the region | 13 | 12·3 |
| Don't know | 21 | 19·8 |
| What do you recommend bite victims do with the animal which has bitten them?* | ||
| Observe the animal for at least 14 days | 73 | 68·9 |
| Check if the animal has been vaccinated against rabies | 14 | 13·2 |
| Kill the biting animal | 2 | 1·9 |
| Take the animal to the veterinarian for a health assessment | 64 | 60·4 |
| Don't know | 7 | 6·6 |
| When should a person be given rabies vaccine?* | ||
| If the animal was confirmed to have rabies | 34 | 32·1 |
| If the biting animal cannot be located or was unfamiliar to the bite victim | 19 | 17·9 |
| If the biting animal died or was killed shortly after the bite | 21 | 19·8 |
| If saliva made contact with broken skin or a mucous membrane (i.e. a bite) | 15 | 14·2 |
| Don't know | 39 | 36·8 |
* Multiple responses allowed, totals may not add up to 100%.