| Literature DB >> 33780454 |
Qiulan Chen1, Xiaoyue Ma2, Jeanette J Rainey3, Yu Li1, Di Mu1, Xiaoyan Tao4, Ye Feng5, Wenwu Yin1, Zhongjie Li1, Shichun Ma6, Brett Petersen2.
Abstract
In 2015, China and other member states of the United Nations adopted the goal of eliminating dog-mediated rabies by 2030. China has made substantial progress in reducing dog-mediated human rabies since peaking with more than 3,300 reported cases in 2007. To further improve coordination and planning, the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, in collaboration with the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, conducted a Stepwise Approach towards Rabies Elimination (SARE) assessment in March 2019. Assessment goals included outlining progress and identifying activities critical for eliminating dog-mediated rabies. Participants representing national, provincial and local human and animal health sectors in China used the SARE assessment tool to answer 115 questions about the current dog-mediated rabies control and prevention programs in China. The established surveillance system for human rabies cases and availability of post-exposure prophylaxis were identified as strengths. Low dog vaccination coverage and limited laboratory confirmation of rabid dogs were identified gaps, resulting in an overall score of 1.5 on a scale of 0 to 5. Participants outlined steps to increase cross-sectoral information sharing, improve surveillance for dog rabies, increase dog vaccination coverage, and increase laboratory capacity to diagnose rabies at the provincial level. All assessment participants committed to strengthening cross-sector collaboration using a One Health approach to achieve dog-mediated human rabies elimination by 2030.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33780454 PMCID: PMC8006992 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0009274
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Agencies* participating in the Stepwise Approach towards Rabies Elimination (SARE) assessment, Beijing, China, March 2019.
| National agencies |
| International Organizations |
*A total of 33 representatives from national and provincial level agencies completed the SARE Tool. Burden is categorized by number of human rabies cases reported in 2018. Chongqing and Beijing are Municipalities directly under the Central Government and administratively report directly to the Central Government. CVRI serves as the national reference laboratory for animal rabies and was certificated by OIE in 2012.
Common gaps, limitations, and barriers at provincial level *identified from the Stepwise Approach towards Rabies Elimination (SARE) assessment, China, March 2019.
| • Weak surveillance system for detecting and reporting animal rabies cases (resulting in significant under-reporting of rabies in the dog population). |
| • Dog registration is infrequent in rural areas. |
| • No census data on home, stray and free-roaming dogs (nor existing methodologies or protocols). |
| • Lack of laboratory diagnostic ability for animal rabies. |
| • Lack of systematic health education on rabies prevention for different sub-populations. |
| • Lack of national strategic plan towards dog-mediated rabies elimination. |
| • Lack of regulation for dog management and vaccination at national level. |
* These common gaps, limitations, and barriers are listed by the seven categories outlined in the SARE assessment tool and identified by human and animal health sector representatives from the 12 provinces participating in the assessment, which included Hunan Province, Guangxi Autonomous Region, Guizhou Province, Guangdong Province, Yunnan Province, Hunan Province, Hubei Province, Hebei Province, Anhui Province, Shandong Province, Beijing Municipality and Chongqing Municipality. Provinces were selected according to the current burden of dog-mediated rabies (high, moderate, and low), interest in participating in the assessment, and availability and ability to aggregate data needed to complete the SARE tool.
Short-, medium-, long-term goals* and priority activities identified from Stepwise Approach towards Rabies Elimination (SARE) workshop participants representing national and 12 provincial level human and animal health sector offices, March 2019.
Goals and activities were identified following completion of the SARE assessment.
| Short-term goals and priority activities |
| 1. Develop and implement a national strategy on rabies elimination |
| Medium-term goals and priority activities |
| 1. Strengthen the epidemiological investigation of human rabies cases for identifying and reporting animal rabies cases to the national animal disease surveillance system, including the development and implementation of relevant protocols and standard operating procedures |
| Long-term goals and priority activities |
| 1. Maintain the dog rabies vaccination coverage above 70% by ensuring availability and access to vaccine, including to dog owners in rural communities |
*Short-term goals were identified as activities associated with Stage 1 and 2 of SARE; Medium-term goals as activities associated with Stage 3 and 4, and Long-term goals as activities associated with Stage 5.