Author/Authors :
Kwoba, Emmah N. Public Health Pharmacology and Toxicology - University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya , Kitala, Philip Public Health Pharmacology and Toxicology - University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya , Ochieng, Linus Centre for Global Health Research - Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kisian Campus, Kenya , Otiang, Elkanah Centre for Global Health Research - Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kisian Campus, Kenya , Ndung’u, Robert Centre for Global Health Research - Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kisian Campus, Kenya , Wambura, Gati Centre for Global Health Research - Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kisian Campus, Kenya , Hampson, Katie The Institute of Biodiversity - Animal Health and Comparative Medicine - University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK , Thumbi, S.M. Centre for Global Health Research - Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kisian Campus, Kenya
Abstract :
Background: Domestic dogs transmit 99% of the estimated 59,000 human rabies deaths occurring globally annually. To achieve the global target of zero human deaths from rabies by 2030, effective mass dog vaccination campaigns that break rabies transmission cycles in dog populations are required. This study describes the design of a dog health and demographic surveillance study established within a human health and demographic surveillance study in Western Kenya. Using baseline data from the dog cohort study, we quantify demographic parameters and describe management practices relevant for rabies transmission.
Methods: All dogs in 1213 households participating in a linked human and animal health syndromic surveillance study were recruited. Data on household demographics, dog ownership, dog age and sex ratios, reproductive indices, rabies vaccination, management practices, dog movement and health status were collected at least monthly.
Results: 460 of 1213 (38%) of the study households owned dogs (mean 2 dogs/household), and 526 (70%) of those without dogs had owned dogs previously. 802 dogs were recruited into the study, more than half (52%) of those with known ages were ≤ 1 year old. The dog:human ratio in the study population was 1:7, the dog density 54 dogs/km2, and the female: male dog sex ratio was 1:1.3. Rabies vaccination was low (5% coverage), and only 48 (12%) male dogs and 13 (5%) female dogs were castrated and spayed, respectively. Dogs were predominantly local breed (99%), mainly kept for security purposes, almost always (97%) left to scavenge for leftovers and 61% roamed freely.
Conclusion: Low vaccination coverage, unrestricted dog movement, and high dog population turnover with a large proportion of dogs below one-year-old support endemic rabies circulation in this population. These gaps present opportunities for the design of effective dog rabies control plans to break rabies transmission cycles in this part of Kenya.
Keywords :
Dog , demographics , ecology , Kenya , rabies