Estimating the Global Burden of Endemic Canine Rabies

Katie Hampson(Glasgow Centre for Population Health), Laurent Coudeville(Sanofi (France)), Tiziana Lembo(Glasgow Centre for Population Health), Maganga Sambo(Ifakara Health Institute), Alexia Kieffer(Sanofi (France)), Michaël Attlan(Sanofi (France)), J Barrat, Jesse D. Blanton(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Deborah J. Briggs(Global Alliance for Rabies Control), Sarah Cleaveland(University of Glasgow), Peter Costa(Global Alliance for Rabies Control), Conrad M. Freuling, Elly Hiby, Lea Knopf(Global Alliance for Rabies Control), Fernando Leanes(Pan American Health Organization (Brasil)), François-Xavier Meslin(Médecins Sans Frontières), Artem Metlin(Institut Pasteur du Cambodge), Mary Elizabeth Miranda(Global Alliance for Rabies Control), Thomas Müller, Louis H. Nel(University of Pretoria), Sergio Recuenco(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Charles E. Rupprecht(Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine), Carolin L. Schumacher, Louise Taylor(Global Alliance for Rabies Control), Marco Antonio Natal Vigilato(Pan American Health Organization (Brasil)), Jakob Zinsstag(Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute), Jonathan Dushoff(McMaster University), on behalf of the Global Alliance for Rabies Control Partners for Rabies Prevention
PLoS neglected tropical diseases
April 16, 2015
Cited by 1,804Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Rabies is a notoriously underreported and neglected disease of low-income countries. This study aims to estimate the public health and economic burden of rabies circulating in domestic dog populations, globally and on a country-by-country basis, allowing an objective assessment of how much this preventable disease costs endemic countries. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We established relationships between rabies mortality and rabies prevention and control measures, which we incorporated into a model framework. We used data derived from extensive literature searches and questionnaires on disease incidence, control interventions and preventative measures within this framework to estimate the disease burden. The burden of rabies impacts on public health sector budgets, local communities and livestock economies, with the highest risk of rabies in the poorest regions of the world. This study estimates that globally canine rabies causes approximately 59,000 (95% Confidence Intervals: 25-159,000) human deaths, over 3.7 million (95% CIs: 1.6-10.4 million) disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) and 8.6 billion USD (95% CIs: 2.9-21.5 billion) economic losses annually. The largest component of the economic burden is due to premature death (55%), followed by direct costs of post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP, 20%) and lost income whilst seeking PEP (15.5%), with only limited costs to the veterinary sector due to dog vaccination (1.5%), and additional costs to communities from livestock losses (6%). CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This study demonstrates that investment in dog vaccination, the single most effective way of reducing the disease burden, has been inadequate and that the availability and affordability of PEP needs improving. Collaborative investments by medical and veterinary sectors could dramatically reduce the current large, and unnecessary, burden of rabies on affected communities. Improved surveillance is needed to reduce uncertainty in burden estimates and to monitor the impacts of control efforts.


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