Surveillance Opportunities and the Need for Intersectoral Collaboration on Rabies in Sri Lanka

Author:

Nihal Pushpakumara Don Bamunusinghage1ORCID,Dangolla Ashoka2,Hettiarachchi Ranjani3,Abeynayake Preeni2,Stephen Craig4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Wildlife Conservation, Sri Lanka

2. Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science, University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka

3. Department of Animal Production and Health, Sri Lanka

4. Canadian Wildlife Health Cooperative, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada

Abstract

Sri Lanka is progressing towards its goal of eliminating human rabies. This goal rests on programs designed to limit canine rabies, which in turn requires a combination of targeted dog rabies control and a better understanding of the movement of the virus between domestic animals, people, and wildlife. Coordinated and integrated surveillance of the disease between human and animal health sectors underpins successful rabies elimination. Our objective was to review surveillance data from 2005 to 2014 to assemble the first multispecies synthesis of rabies information in Sri Lanka and, in doing so, assess needs and opportunities for a One Health approach to rabies surveillance in the country. Our descriptive epidemiological findings were consistent with other studies showing a decline in human cases, endemic and unchanging numbers of dog cases, a relationship between human density and the occurrence of human and animal cases, and significant gaps in understanding trends in rabies incidences in livestock and wildlife. Assessing the trends in the data from the three government organizations responsible for rabies surveillance was difficult due to lack of information on animal population sizes, unquantified sampling biases due to inequities in access to diagnostic capacities, regulatory and administrative barriers, and a continued reliance on clinical means to establish a diagnosis. The information required for a comprehensive rabies control programme was not standardized or consistent, was not in one place, showed significant gaps in completeness, and was not amenable to routine and rapid analysis. Achieving rabies elimination in Sri Lanka would benefit from harmonization of diagnostic and information management standards across animal and human health sectors as well as equitable access to diagnostic capacity for all regions and species.

Funder

International Development Research Committee (IDRC) of Canada

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

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