| Literature DB >> 31971943 |
Carlos Sánchez-Soriano1, Andrew D Gibson2,3, Luke Gamble3, Jordana L Burdon Bailey3, Dagmar Mayer3, Frederic Lohr3, Patrick Chikungwa4, Julius Chulu4, Ian G Handel1,2, Barend M deC Bronsvoort1,2, Richard J Mellanby1, Stella Mazeri1,2.
Abstract
Rabies is a devastating zoonotic disease causing nearly 60,000 deaths globally each year. The disease causes Malawi an economic loss of 13 million USD and kills almost 500 people annually. Domestic dogs are the main reservoir for rabies and vaccinating over 70% of the dog population is the most efficient method to reduce its incidence in both humans and canines. However, achieving such coverages is often difficult and depend on many geospatial factors. Rural and pastoral regions are considered difficult to vaccinate efficiently due to low dog densities, and reports of campaigns spanning large areas containing vastly different communities are lacking. This study describes a mass canine vaccination campaign covering rural and urban regions in southern Malawi. The campaign achieved an average vaccination coverage of 83.4% across 3 districts, and vaccinated over 89,000 dogs through a combined static point and door-to-door effort. A dog population of 107,574 dogs was estimated (dog:human ratio of 1:23). The canine population was found to be almost completely owned (99.2%) and mostly kept for security purposes (82.7%). The dogs were mainly adults, males, and not neutered. Regression analysis identified education level and proportion of young dogs as the only factors influencing (positively and negatively, respectively) whether vaccination coverage over 70% was achieved in a region, independently of variables such as population density or poverty. A second regression analysis was performed predicting absolute vaccination coverage. While education level and the proportion of confined dogs were associated with positive vaccination coverage, higher proportions of young animals and female dogs were associated with a decrease in coverage. This study confirms the feasibility of homogeneously vaccinating over 70% of the dogs in a large area including rural and urban communities. These findings can inform the logistics of future campaigns and might be used as a template to facilitate high-number, high-coverage vaccination campaigns to other regions in sub-Saharan Africa.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31971943 PMCID: PMC6999910 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0008004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Timespans for the different stages of the campaign at each region.
Post-vaccination surveys for Zomba district were carried out intermittently between the rural and urban regions.
| Region | Static Point | Door-to-Door | Post-vaccination survey |
|---|---|---|---|
| April 22 –May 23, 2017 | April 24 –May 31, 2017 | June 2 –June 21, 2017 | |
| June 10 –June 21, 2017 | June 12 –June 21, 2017 | Aug. 1 –Aug. 11, 2017 | |
| July 3 –Oct. 13, 2017 | July 3 –Oct. 13, 2017 | Jan. 16 –Feb. 9, 2018 | |
| July 3 –Dec. 13, 2017 | June 28 –Dec. 13, 2017 | Feb. 12 –March 13, 2018 | |
| July 11 –Sept. 29, 2017 | July 11 –Sept. 29, 2017 | July 31 –Oct. 10, 2017 |
Summary of vaccination numbers and estimated coverage per region.
Coverage achieved with 95% CI also included.
| Region | SP vaccinated | D2D vaccinated | Total | Total Surveyed | Surveyed Vaccinated | Coverage (%) | Confidence Interval (95%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9149 | 6593 | 15742 | 587 | 486 | 82.8 | (79.5–85.8) | |
| 24782 | 9644 | 34426 | 1715 | 1466 | 85.5 | (83.7–87.1) | |
| 8822 | 5757 | 14579 | 753 | 626 | 83.1 | (80.3–85.7) | |
| 8064 | 9948 | 18012 | 480 | 369 | 76.9 | (72.8–80.6) | |
| 4709 | 1564 | 6273 | 134 | 113 | 84.3 | (77–90) | |
Fig 1Plot of dog vaccination coverage per EPA.
Coverages for the whole southern Malawi working area included. 95% confidence intervals presented by the vertical bars. EPAs whose coverage surpassed 70% are coloured in blue, while EPAS under 70% are coloured in red. EPAs whose coverage and lower 95% CI bound surpass 70% are coloured in green.
Summary of ownership and dog population estimates per region.
Estimates based on the D2D dataset.
| Region | Owned dogs seen | Owned proportion | Dog-owning households | Dog population | Confidence Interval (95%) | Dog density | Dog:Human ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6959 | 99.91% | 51.67% | 19023 | (18381–19752) | 10.69 | 1:23.7 | |
| 20336 | 98.77% | 62.27% | 40770 | (40014–41580) | 171.31 | 1:19.6 | |
| 5755 | 99.77% | 53.47% | 17571 | (17023–18173) | 22.88 | 1:20.3 | |
| 9975 | 99.6% | 33.69% | 23509 | (22465–24692) | 9.51 | 1:31.8 | |
| 4258 | 98.72% | 48.19% | 7524 | (7025–8152) | 187.81 | 1:14 | |
Fig 2Bar plot of dog household ownership per EPA.
EPAs coloured according to the region they belong to.
Summary of vaccination numbers per day and mean vaccinations per day/team and hour/team.
| Region | Campaign | Mean vaccinated per day | Mean vaccinated per day / team | Mean vaccinated per hour / team |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 68.7 | 37.2 | 10.6 | ||
| 113.2 | 58.8 | 30.9 | ||
| 482.2 | 27.1 | 21.7 | ||
| 1261.2 | 75.9 | 38.1 | ||
| 78.9 | 39.9 | 11.5 | ||
| 143.6 | 73.1 | 28.5 | ||
| 165.8 | 41.5 | 10.3 | ||
| 169.2 | 53.9 | 32.6 | ||
| 142.2 | 19.2 | 15.9 | ||
| 651 | 77.9 | 33.7 | ||
Fig 3Topographical distribution of the 139 polygons used for the logistic regression.
The position of the campaign working zone within Malawi is also shown. Background tiling by Stamen Design (maps.stamen.com, CC BY 3.0), with data by OpenStreetMap (ODbL).
Descriptive summary by region of attributes averaged through the Convex Hull polygons in each region.
The mean values for each variable are shown. “Other animal percentage” refers to the percentage of households owning other animals. “Education levels” refers to the education of the surveyed person, on a numerical scale from 0 (“no education”) to 4 (“under- or postgraduate studies”). “Population density” refers to the number of people per hectare (2011). “Poverty $2.00 proportion” refers to the proportion of people living on $2.00 a day (2011).
| Variable | Blantyre Rural | Blantyre Urban | Chiradzulu Rural | Zomba Rural | Zomba Urban |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14.4 | 13.9 | 22.2 | 8.9 | 13.0 | |
| 1.99 | 1.69 | 1.68 | 1.69 | 1.61 | |
| 35.48% | 30.89% | 36.53% | 29.27% | 33.02% | |
| 13.68% | 4.69% | 11.31% | 14.09% | 0.68% | |
| 13.47% | 53.16% | 31.85% | 32.76% | 21.34% | |
| 79.24% | 35.83% | 80.71% | 74.42% | 51.60% | |
| 3.4 | 3.5 | 3.3 | 2.3 | 4.1 | |
| 1.4 | 2.1 | 1.6 | 1.2 | 1.8 | |
| 4.08 | 90.82 | 5.56 | 4.46 | 58.57 | |
| 77.16% | 30.34% | 76.37% | 81.41% | 58.58% |
Fig 4Graphical representation of the chosen regression model predicting absolute coverage (ACM).
The 95% CI is represented as horizontal bars. The value for the odds ratio is indicated above the 95% CI. A positive relationship between the variable and the response is coloured in red (odds ratio > 1.000), while a negative relationship is coloured in blue (odds ratio < 1.000). Baseline categories are coloured in grey. P values are shown on the left.
Fig 5Graphical representation of the estimated marginal means analysis from the absolute coverage model (ACM).
The vertical bar represents the 70% vaccination coverage threshold. The 95% CI is represented as horizontal bars. Estimated coverages under 70% are coloured in red. Estimated coverages over 70% are coloured in blue. Estimated coverages whose lower 95% CI bound surpass 70% are coloured in green.