| Literature DB >> 33553562 |
Faming Miao1, Nan Li1, Jinjin Yang1, Teng Chen1, Ye Liu1, Shoufeng Zhang1, Rongliang Hu1.
Abstract
Complex rabies transmission dynamics, including in dogs, wildlife livestock, and human-acquired rabies, can be observed in China. A temporary decrease in human rabies deaths with a simultaneous increase in animal rabies transmission is a typical example of "sectoral management separation" but not of the recommended "one-health" concept. In contrast to reliance on mass dog vaccination, reliance on postexposure prophylaxis to reduce human rabies burden is costly and ineffective in the prevention of rabies transmission from dogs to humans and other susceptible animal species. To answer the WHO call for the "elimination of dog-mediated human rabies by 2030," China faces the challenge of a lack of a strong political commitment and a workable plan and must act now before the rabies transmission dynamics become increasingly complicated by spreading to other species, such as ferret badgers in the Southeast and raccoon dogs and foxes in the North.Entities:
Keywords: Animal; Epidemics; One health; Rabies; Virus
Year: 2021 PMID: 33553562 PMCID: PMC7843516 DOI: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2021.100212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: One Health ISSN: 2352-7714