Acknowledging
that Rabies is a major
public health challenge in India,
the government proposes to make it a priority disease
for control under the 12th Five Year Plan.
A Viral Zoonotic Disease primarily infecting
domestic and wild animals,
rabies spreads to people through close contact with Infected Saliva via Bites and
Scratches.
There is no treatment available globally after the disease
develops. An estimated 20,000
deaths occur annually
in India due to rabies.
While Dogs are the main Host and
Transmitters, others responsible for the disease are cat, mongoose, monkeys and such other warm-blooded animals.
Strategies to prevent death due to rabies
were developed through a pilot project
during the 11th Plan and these strategies are
Proposed to be Implemented countrywide in the 12th Plan . The
11th Plan Targeted Reduction of Rabies Deaths in Humans
by at least 50 per cent by the end of the Plan period in the pilot project that covered Ahmedabad, Bangalore,
Pune, Madurai and
Delhi.
As of now, India
does not have a Comprehensive National Rabies Control Programme. Various organizations are involved in control activities without any inter-sectoral coordination.
The existing prevention activities are being carried
out by municipal bodies, but no tangible results have been achieved.
Experience
gained from the Implementation of the Pilot Project indicates that
the Strategy is Feasible, Reproducible and Implementable.
It is now proposed to roll out a Comprehensive
Control Strategy for both Human and Animal
components in the 12th Plan. All 35 States/UTs
will be covered for the human component and the animal component will be piloted in selected 30
cities.
The
programme will include Training Health Professionals
to Deal with Animal Bites, Awareness Creation and
Minimising Animal
Bites. On the veterinary
side, the Focus is on Sterilisation and Vaccination
of Dogs, with a larger involvement of civil society and municipal
bodies.
Advocating
the need for greater awareness
of the disease, the World
Health Organisation (WHO) says
Children and Poor People are particularly vulnerable.
The
disease claims
55,000 human lives across the world every year, mostly
in Africa and Asia. The number of Animal Bites in India,
however, is not reliably known, though
some studies have estimated it to be as
high as 17.4 million a year.
The last survey conducted by the Association for Prevention and Control of Rabies in India in
2003 was supported by the WHO and it put the number of Deaths at
20,000. About 90 per cent of the Mortality and
Morbidity here is associated with dog bites.
Modern,
Safe and Effective Anti-Rabies Cell Culture Vaccines are being used for post-exposure treatment in India after the government banned the production and use of nervous tissue vaccine in December 2004. Intradermal
Rabies vaccination has been
promoted at the State level in designated rabies
clinics.
The
WHO says prevention of human rabies
is possible through Mass Dog Vaccination, Promotion of Responsible Dog Ownership and Dog Population
Control Programmes
with a partnership approach.
Many countries in South America and Asia have
successfully used this strategy to eliminate transmission
of rabies.
However,
this is a challenge for
India as it has a large population
of dogs (around 25 million) and very low vaccination coverage.
( The Hindu )
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