In News
- The Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare along with the Minister of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying has launched NAPRE on World Rabies Day.
- The Rabies is also known as “Hadakwa”, “mad dog disease” or “Hydrophobia”.
Rabies
- It is a zoonotic viral disease.
- It is caused by the Rabies virus, of the Lyssavirus genus, within the family Rhabdoviridae.
- It is an Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) virus that is present in the saliva of a rabid animal (dog, cat, monkey, etc).
- Rabies is 100% fatal but 100% vaccine preventable.
- 33% of global rabies deaths are recorded in India.
- Common Vectors/ Reservoirs of Virus
- The most common reservoir of the virus is the domestic/street dog especially in South Asia and Africa.
- More than 99% of human deaths due to rabies are caused by dog-mediated rabies.
- In developed nations like the USA, animals that transmit rabies are bats, foxes, raccoons, and skunks.
- Most mammals can carry the virus and hence can cause the disease.
- It spreads by bite of a rabid animal that leads to deposition of the saliva and the virus in the wound.
- The incubation period varies from 4 days to 2 years or sometimes even more.
- Incubation period means the time interval between the bite and occurrence of symptoms/signs of the disease.
- Symptoms
- Fever, Headache, Nausea, Vomiting
- Anxiety, Confusion, Hyperactivity, Hallucinations, Insomnia
- Difficulty swallowing
- Excessive salivation
- Partial paralysis
- Fear brought on by attempts to drink fluids because of difficulty swallowing water, etc.
- The death invariably occurs in 4 days to 2 weeks due to cardio-respiratory failure.
Control and Prevention of Rabies
- Get rabies vaccination to prevent the infection.
- Vaccinating your pet against the disease.
- Maintain distance with the wild animals.
- Wash wounds with soap and water and maintain good hygiene.
- Keep your pets away from the other stray dogs.
- Prevent bats wandering around your campuses and living places.
World Rabies Day
- It is celebrated on 28 September which marks the anniversary of Louis Pasteur’s death.
- Louis Pasteur was a French chemist and microbiologist, who developed the first rabies vaccine.
- He also discovered Pasteurisation, Vaccines for Anthrax and Cholera and Chamberland filters.
- In 2007, the first World Rabies Day (ERD) was organised by the two founding partners namely
- Alliance for Rabies Control (ARC) and
- the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta (CDC).
- Theme for World Rabies Day 2021 is “Rabies: Facts, not Fear”.
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About National Action Plan for dog Mediated Rabies Elimination by 2030 (NAPRE)
- Declare Rabies as Notifiable Disease:
- The union will encourage all the States and UTs to make Rabies a notifiable Disease.
- “Joint Inter-Ministerial Declaration Support Statement” for Elimination of Dog mediated Rabies from India by 2030 was also launched.
- It emphasized on the need of One Health Approach for achieving the 2030 targets.
- Holistic approach to health keeping in mind human- animal interaction and their broader interaction with the environment can help alleviate such challenges.
- Also environmental factors like rainfall, heat-wave can also contribute to the trajectory of the pathogen and the disease.
- Involvement of National Centre for Disease Control:
- NCDC has rich experience in tackling zoonotic diseases like Nipah, Zika, Avian flu and surveillance of diseases like influenza, hepatitis.
- It would play a great role in the Government’s effort to boost One Health approach.
Notifiable Diseases
- A notifiable disease is any disease that is required by law to be reported to government authorities.
- Registered medical practitioners need to
- notify such diseases in a proper form within 3 days, or
- notify verbally via phone within 24 hours depending on the urgency of the situation.
- The collation of information allows the authorities to monitor the disease, and provides early warning of possible outbreaks.
- The WHO’s International Health Regulations, 1969 also require disease reporting to the WHO in order to help with its functions like
- global surveillance and
- advisory role.
- The onus of notifying any disease and the implementation lies with the state government in India.
- Few Notifiable Diseases
- The Centre has notified several diseases such as
- Cholera, Diphtheria, Encephalitis, Leprosy, Meningitis, Pertussis (whooping cough), Plague, Tuberculosis, AIDS, Hepatitis, measles, yellow fever, malaria dengue, etc.
One Health Approach
- It is “the collaborative efforts of multiple disciplines
- working locally, nationally, and globally,
- to attain optimal health for people, animals and our environment“
- As two-thirds of all present diseases have their origin in animals, one health approach gains significance.
Source: ResearchGate
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Need of the NAPRE Policy
- Era of Globalisation
- Earlier people did not venture out beyond a radius of 20-25 kms.
- Now with the advent of modern life, an individual can also opt for overnight inter-continental travel.
- It enables him to come in contact with a wide range of people of various backgrounds in different countries.
- It results in quick and uncontrolled transmission of various diseases.
- Human Cost to Disease
- Most victims of the disease are those who are in their most productive years of their life.
- Thus, zoonotic diseases like Rabies claim the lives of young people who are often bread winners of the family.
Conclusion and Way Forward
- Use of Village language for Awareness Campaigns
- In the rural area, the english names are rarely known but even the mention of ‘Hadakwa’ induces terror in rural areas.
- Villagers will actively help the government in this noble endeavour if they are presented with the more familiar terms.
- Extensive use of IEC
- Extensive IEC should be done to make people aware of the difference between vaccines and medicine with regard to Rabies.
- Many people are confused and mistake the vaccine, a precautionary step with medicine, a curative solution after the onset of the disease.
- Although each Rabies death is preventable by vaccine, there are no medicines once the disease develops in a human.
- Institutionalising Umbrella Body
- The institutionalization of an umbrella body for better coordination between inter-ministerial bodies and other stakeholders can help a lot.
Source: PIB