RECENTLY, I saw an eight-year-old boy from Dadu, who had been mauled
by a pack of dogs. His scalp was torn off, his ear lobe was hanging
and his armpits were chewed up. In fact, his entire body was
mutilated. The distraught father, a simple peasant, carried him to
small and large hospitals in Sindh, but none had the wherewithal to
treat the child. Twenty-four hours later he reached the Indus Hospital
where he was attended to. Under anaesthesia his wounds were washed and
debrided; each wound was injected with Rabies Immunoglobulin (RIG),
and the anti-rabies vaccine series initiated. Extensive plastic
surgery procedures are still in process, and we hope the child will
survive, although he will remain physically and mentally scarred for
life.
http://www.dawn.com/news/1209653/ending-rabies
Pakistan’s population is over 186 million and growing. The literacy
rate is one of the lowest in the world. Tuberculosis, malaria,
hepatitis, dengue, typhoid, polio and a host of infectious diseases
account for the majority of disease, disability and deaths. Among
these myriad problems, animal bites and rabies are nowhere on the
radar of health authorities. The population of stray dogs is growing,
as is the incidence of dog bites and rabies deaths.

Infected animals, mostly dogs, harbour the virus in their saliva.
Several weeks after a bite from an infected dog, the victim develops
headache, fever and becomes intermittently confused. Gradually, the
muscles of swallowing and breathing go into spasm, and he has
difficulty swallowing food or water (hydrophobia) and breathing
(aerophobia). A few days pass without food or water. He is fatigued
and dehydrated. The dying person feels a sense of impending doom.
Death is inevitable. The family he leaves behind will remain with the
indelible memory of his tortured death. Sixty-thousand deaths from
rabies occur globally each year, of which 20,000 take place in India,
and around 2,000 to 5,000 in Pakistan. Rabies is 100pc preventable if
treated correctly at the time of the bite. Delayed or no treatment
ends in sure death.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Rabies is totally preventable if treated correctly at the time of the bite.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In a WHO-sponsored Rabies Surveillance Project we studied nearly
10,000 cases of dog-bite victims from nine emergency departments
across Pakistan. Nearly 80pc were male, and one-third between five to
14 years. Few victims washed their wounds with soap and water as
recommended; instead, they applied unsafe household remedies: salt,
turmeric or red chillies. Interviews of healthcare workers revealed
that modern, lifesaving modalities of treatment were virtually unknown
to them, since most emergency departments are not even equipped with
modern vaccine and RIG. Stray dog bites occur frequently in rural
areas. Often villagers must travel for hours, even days, to reach an
equipped hospital; frequently, they do not complete the full
vaccination course. If and when symptoms of rabies develop and death
seems certain, the despairing family consults a mystic in a shrine for
mumbo-jumbo treatment.

As evident at a recent Saarc workshop in Sri Lanka, the entire focus
of human rabies elimination has shifted to dog rabies elimination. A
‘one health’ approach was recommended for all member countries to
establish national and sub-national multi-sectoral steering committees
for elimination of both animal and human rabies.

This is entirely logical. The difficulty is the logistics. Dog culling
has totally failed in the long run wherever attempted. Developed, and
now some developing countries, have demonstrated that vaccinating at
least 70pc of feral dogs in a given area will create herd immunity.
Immunised dogs are less aggressive, and even if provoked to bite, they
will not transmit the virus. Sri Lanka, Bhutan and Thailand are well
on their way to eliminating dog rabies by mass dog vaccination through
organised campaigns. Many other countries are practising Capture,
Neuter and Vaccina­tion of stray dogs. Their population will
eventually reduce, while maintaining the ecological balance. This is
the only sure way to eliminate rabies in dogs and thus in humans.

In Pakistan, there is no such consideration. Most graduates of
veterinary colleges specialise in lucrative practices of livestock and
animal husbandry; municipal authorities either ignore the issue, or
organise sporadic but ineffective dog-killing campaigns; hospital
directors choose not to provide lifesaving medicines, assuming they
are too expensive; medics remain unaware of treatment modalities; the
uneducated continue in the time warp of unsafe antidotes. The result
is heartrending cases of rabies deaths on the rise.

The Indus Hospital, Rabies in Asia and Medical Microbiology and
Infectious Diseases Society of Pakistan jointly launched an intensive
month-long awareness campaign in underprivileged districts of Karachi
to wake up the slumbering authorities, and advise dog-bite victims on
the proper course for rabies prevention. World Rabies Day was observed
yesterday, and we should say as loudly as we can: ‘nobody in Pakistan
should die of rabies’.

The writer is a member the WHO Expert Panel for Rabies and president
Rabies in Asia, Pakistan chapter.


-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU



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