| Literature DB >> 33096767 |
Sreejith Radhakrishnan1,2, Abi Tamim Vanak3,4,5, Pierre Nouvellet1,6, Christl A Donnelly1,7.
Abstract
India bears the highest burden of global dog-mediated human rabies deaths. Despite this, rabies is not notifiable in India and continues to be underprioritised in public health discussions. This review examines the historical treatment of rabies in British India, a disease which has received relatively less attention in the literature on Indian medical history. Human and animal rabies was widespread in British India, and treatment of bite victims imposed a major financial burden on the colonial Government of India. It subsequently became a driver of Pasteurism in India and globally and a key component of British colonial scientific enterprise. Efforts to combat rabies led to the establishment of a wide network of research institutes in India and important breakthroughs in development of rabies vaccines. As a result of these efforts, rabies no longer posed a significant threat to the British, and it declined in administrative and public health priorities in India towards the end of colonial rule-a decline that has yet to be reversed in modern-day India. The review also highlights features of the administrative, scientific and societal approaches to dealing with this disease in British India that persist to this day.Entities:
Keywords: British India; Civil Veterinary Department; Pasteur Institute; colonial; stray dogs; vaccination
Year: 2020 PMID: 33096767 PMCID: PMC7709690 DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed5040162
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Med Infect Dis ISSN: 2414-6366
Figure 1Total number of rabies cases reported each year in all animal species in British India between 1887 and 1951 (annual data span April to the following March, e.g., April 1887 to March 1888). Statistics were compiled from annual reports of the Civil Veterinary Department of the colonial British Government of India, available at https://digital.nls.uk/indiapapers/.
Figure 2Annual rabies incidence in all animal species between 1887 and 1951 (annual data span April to the following March, e.g., April 1887 to March 1888) in every British province in India (except Baluchistan for which no data were available) and the princely state of Manipur. Statistics were compiled from annual reports of the Civil Veterinary Department of the colonial British Government of India, available at https://digital.nls.uk/indiapapers/. Note the different scale of the y-axis for each region.
Number of people given rabies post-exposure prophylaxis at various Pasteur Institutes in India. Category totals may not always match as the breakdown of the number of patients treated and the number of deaths was not always explicitly reported.
| Year | Numbers Treated (Number of Deaths) | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| European | Native/Indian | Total | ||
| 1900–1901 1 | 146 (1) | 175 (9) | 321 (10) | [ |
| 1901–1902 1 | 215 (2) | 328 (11) | 543 (13) | [ |
| 1902–1903 1 | 269 (1) | 315 (12) | 584 (12) | [ |
| 1903–1904 1 | 248 (0) | 364 (10) | 612 (10) | [ |
| 1904–1905 1 | 307 (0) | 570 (12) | 877 (12) | [ |
| 1905–1906 1 | 342 (2) | 803 (19) | 1145 (21) | [ |
| 1906–1907 1 | 452 (2) | 846 (17) | 1308 (19) | [ |
| Interim, 09/08–31/12, 1907 1 | 146 (1) | 373 (4) | 519 (5) | [ |
| 1908 2 | 342 (2) | 1047 (24) | 1729 (26) | [ |
| 1909 2 | 675 (3) | 1920 (25) | 2595 (28) | [ |
| 1910 2 | 575 (0) | 2325 (43) | 2900 (43) | [ |
| 1911 2 | 297(1) | 2911 (50) | 3208 (51) | [ |
| 1912 2 | 400 (0) | 4388 (59) | 4788 (59) | [ |
| 1913 2 | 2 (2) | 5271 (66) | 5273 (68) | [ |
| 1914 2 | NA (1) | NA (60) | 5795 (61) | [ |
| 1915 2 | 468 (1) | 6409 (41) | 6877 (42) | [ |
| 1933 1 | 1356 (0) | 14,582 (83) | 15,938 (83) | [ |
| 1936 1 | 1357 (0) | NA (97) | NA (97) | [ |
| 1938 3 | NA (NA) | NA (NA) | 12,396 (21) | [ |
1 Figures for Kasauli institute only; 2 figures combined for all Pasteur institutes in India, where available; 3 Coonoor institute and its subsidiary centres only; NA—not available.