Rabies: India

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Immunisation

Rabies immunization protocol

Asit Jolly , Homegrown cure for Rabies gets WHO nod “India Today” 12/2/2018


The World Health Organization (WHO) has notified a rabies immunisation protocol developed by Omesh Bharti, 49, a government doctor in Himachal Pradesh, as the new global standard. The procedure, successfully tested on thousands of dog and monkey bite victims in the past five years, brings down the cost of treatment from Rs 35,000 to Rs 350 per patient!

The existing treatment involved injecting patients with the rabies vaccine and rabies immunoglobulin (RIG) extracted from horse or human blood. Human RIG, which needed to be administered in large doses as per the victim's body weight, cost Rs 6,000-8,000 per vial, and was "beyond the reach of most victims". Working at the time (2013-2015) as a health officer with the Shimla Municipal Corporation, Bharti had rare access to brain tissue samples from rabid dogs, monkeys and Himalayan palm civets found dead in the area. He evolved a protocol that required a fraction of the RIG needed for conventional treatment. "A tiny amount of RIG injected directly into the wound was just as effective as administering large amounts," he says. Similarly, administering 'intra-dermally' rather than as an 'intra-muscular' injection required less than a 10th of the vaccine. Despite early scepticism, the meeting of WHO's Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) in Bangkok in 2016, included Bharti's protocol in its agenda for discussion. "By then, we had 7,000 successful cases in Himachal," he says.

It helped that Himachal health authorities avidly supported Bharti's work. Even before WHO's endorsement, Bharti has trained scores of local medical professionals deployed at myriad state-run rabies clinics across the state. Himachal has now made rabies treatment (using RIG) free.

"In 2017, there were just two rabies-related deaths [in HP]-one a woman who refused treatment; the other a youth who went to a private practitioner," says Bharti. His work could help stem substantially the 55,000 rabies deaths a year reported worldwide, the majority in Asia and Africa.

Finally endorsed by the SAGE in Geneva on January 15 as "cost-, dose- and time-sparing, while assuring safety and clinical effectiveness", the updated WHO recommendations on rabies immunisation supersede its 2010 position. A full version of the new protocol is in cue for publication in the Weekly Epidemiological Record in April.

Goa

2021: first state to eliminate rabies cases

Nida Sayed, June 26, 2021: The Times of India

Deaths recorded due to rabies in India, 2016-18
From: Nida Sayed, June 26, 2021: The Times of India
Human deaths due to rabies in Goa, 2011-21
From: Nida Sayed, June 26, 2021: The Times of India
Dogs vaccinated in Goa, 2015-21
From: Nida Sayed, June 26, 2021: The Times of India
Goa’s stagewise approach to eliminating rabies, 2013-21
From: Nida Sayed, June 26, 2021: The Times of India

In 2018, Goa recorded zero cases of people getting rabies after being bitten by a dog in the state. It maintained the record in 2019 and did it again in 2020. As of June 2021, there have been zero human rabies cases in the state for over three years and just eight cases in which dogs were found to be infected. Goa officially became the first state in India to beat the virus, in a country that sees an estimated 45 lakh cases of people being exposed to rabies annually.

“The state-wide rabies control in Goa has been the result of a global collaborative effort,” the organisation Mission Rabies said in a celebratory post on its website on June 23. The achievement stands out because India accounts for 36% of all the deaths in the world due to rabies and up to 20,000 people die annually due to it, says the World Health Organisation.

According to the global health body, about 30-60% cases and deaths are seen among children under the age of 15, since dog bites are either unrecognised and unreported. In 2018, the WHO launched a global strategic plan to eliminate dog-mediated human rabies by the year 2030.

Goa’s achievement was the result of a seven-year campaign that involved the state’s directorate of animal husbandry and veterinary services (AHVS) and the Mission Rabies, an initiative founded by the UK-based Worldwide Veterinary Service.

A mass vaccination campaign

In 2014, Mission Rabies began its surveillance of rabies cases after getting a positive response from the state government. The organisation responded to 45 cases, in which 39 of the dogs tested positive. As surveillance across the state increased, the number of rabies cases that came to light rose.

The organisation discovered there was no data available on the total number of stray or pet dogs, and there was no estimate of dog deaths due to rabies. As a result, the first stage of the project focussed on an assessment of the dog population, the funds required to vaccinate them and formulating a plan.

Led by Mission Rabies founder and CEO Luke Gamble, a team of volunteers decided to vaccinate 50,000 dogs in 30 days. Over 500 veterinary doctors from 16 different countries arrived in the state to assist local veterinarians and dog catchers. It was a success. Exceeding their target, the volunteers vaccinated 63,000 dogs in 30 days.

Having got a rough idea of Goa’s stray dog populace, lengthy discussions were held with local veterinarians and AHVS officials. Following that, the Manohar Parrikar-led state government in 2015 signed an MoU with Mission Rabies to carry out a dog vaccination drive across the state.

As a result of this agreement, rabies vaccines have been administered free of cost to dogs in Goa since 2015. The state government has spent Rs 3.48 crore till August 2020 on rabies control.

“Parrikar had the vision to realise that if we focus on the problem, have faith in the team and divert funds towards the project, the elimination of the rabies virus is possible,” said Gowri Yale, scientific and technical manager at Mission Rabies.

The battle against rabies

The organisation set up a 24-hour rabies surveillance system, which included a hotline number for citizens to report suspected rabies cases. Teams of volunteers would visit each taluka to vaccinate and sterilise dogs. A rapid response and support team were also set up to help dog bite victims in the state.

After awareness about rabies was found to be very low among children in 2014, Mission Rabies started campaigns to educate students in 1,450 schools about avoiding and the management of dog bites. Till date, 5.4 lakh rabies vaccinations have been administered to dogs, and nearly 10 lakh students and citizens have been educated in awareness campaigns.

The awareness programmes continued during the Covid-19 pandemic through online videos that were shared with schools.

Animal rabies cases remains a worry

Despite detecting no cases of persons with rabies since 2018, Goa isn’t 100% rabies-free. Even in 2018, the one rabies death recorded was of a boy from Sawantwadi taluka who was bitten by a dog outside the state. “Animal rabies cases are detected from time-to-time at border talukas only due to migration from unprotected Maharashtra,” said Murugan Appupillai, Mission Rabies’ education director.

He said that Maharashtra was “flooded with rabies cases” that are not reported or recorded. The state government has written to Karnataka and Maharashtra about the issue but has received limited response so far.

The stray dog populace from neighbouring states was a particular matter of concern following the national lockdown in 2020.

“Many dogs migrated into Goa in search of food (during the lockdown) and we suspect that this was the reason for an increase in rabies cases among stray dogs. These cases were mainly reported in Bicholim, Pernem and Sattari making it a total of 24 rabies cases last year,” said Yale.

Braving the rain after the lockdown, teams of volunteers spread out across the state and managed to restrict the number of cases. To their relief, there was no case of a person being infected in the state.

The AVHS announced on June 23 that people entering Goa with pets, especially tourists, had to inform them about the number of animals and their vaccination details using the anti-rabies hotline (+91 7744029586).

“If their pets are not vaccinated, we will arrange for the vaccination free of cost,” said Dr Marvin Lopes, AHVS deputy director and nodal officer for Mission Rabies in Goa.

The state government is optimistic that they can monitor pets brought by people, but the control of stray dogs remains a matter of concern. The aim is to now vaccinate stray dogs in the Maharashtra-Karnataka border areas and thus prevent potentially rabid dogs from entering Goa. Mission Rabies is also going to take up a rabies vaccination campaign in September-October to ensure dog owners vaccinate their pets.

"We will be joining hands with NGOs and animal rescuers across Goa to help us with the campaign,” said Julie Corfmat, Mission Rabies project manager.

"This campaign will be launched on world rabies day, on September 28 and will go on till October 14. The proposed schedule for the campaign will focus on one taluka per day." she said.

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