Abstract
Abstract
Dog vaccination is the key to controlling rabies in human populations. However, in countries like India, with large free-roaming dog populations, vaccination strategies that rely only on parenteral vaccines are unlikely to be either feasible or successful. Oral rabies vaccines could be used to reach these dogs. We use cost estimates for an Indian city and linear optimisation to find the most cost-effective vaccination strategies. We show that an oral bait handout method for dogs that are never confined can reduce the per dog costs of vaccination and increase vaccine coverage. This finding holds even when baits cost up to 10x the price of parenteral vaccines, if there is a large dog population or proportion of dogs that are never confined. We suggest that oral rabies vaccine baits will be part of the most cost-effective strategies to eliminate human deaths from dog-mediated rabies by 2030.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Reference43 articles.
1. Estimating the effectiveness of vaccine programs in dog populations
2. [4] World Health Organization (2022) Rabies in India. Available at https://www.who.int/india/health-topics/rabies (accessed 24 October 2022).
3. Demographic characteristics of free-roaming dogs (FRD) in rural and urban India following a photographic sight-resight survey
4. [17] Tiwari, HK (2019) Free roaming dog population, community perception and control of dog related rabies: The Indian story. Ph.D. thesis Murdoch University.