UQ Spatial Epidemiology Laboratory, School of Veterinary Science, University of Queensland, Gatton, Australia.
Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Abuja, Abuja, Nigeria.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2021 Aug 16;15(8):e0009617. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0009617. eCollection 2021 Aug.
Human rabies remains a significant public health problem in Africa with outbreaks reported in most countries. In Nigeria-the most populous country in Africa-rabies causes a significant public health burden partly due to perennial obstacles to implementing a national prevention and control program.
We conducted a scoping review using standard Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines to identify and select published articles from Nigeria during 1978-2020 reporting on rabies virus infections (human, canine, livestock, and wildlife), canine bites, knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAP) surveys on rabies and canine ecology studies. We extracted information on study location, year and additional details of each study such as rabies prevalence, general characteristics of offending dogs, dog vaccination status and health-seeking behaviours.
Between 1978 and 2020, 90 published articles met our inclusion criteria. The prevalence of rabies virus antigen detection varied between 3% and 28%, with more studies in the north. Most bites were unprovoked from dog bite studies (36.4%-97%), by dogs with low vaccination rates (12-38%). A more significant proportion of biting dogs were owned (31-90%). Laboratory confirmation for biting was available for only a small proportion of studies (6%; n = 2/32). Of the dogs surveyed during ecology studies, indigenous dogs accounted for the majority (62-98%), used mostly for security purposes (52-98%), with the vaccination rate between 15% and 38% in most states. Studies conducted in areas distant from rabies diagnostic facilities accounted for more human rabies cases and fewer dog rabies cases.
Significant improvements are necessary to achieve the elimination of human rabies mediated via dogs by 2030.
在非洲,人类狂犬病仍然是一个重大的公共卫生问题,大多数国家都有疫情报告。在尼日利亚——非洲人口最多的国家——由于实施国家预防和控制计划的常年障碍,狂犬病造成了重大的公共卫生负担。
我们使用标准的系统评价和荟萃分析(PRISMA)首选报告项目指南进行了范围综述,以确定并选择 1978 年至 2020 年期间在尼日利亚发表的报告狂犬病病毒感染(人类、犬、牲畜和野生动物)、犬咬伤、狂犬病知识、态度和实践(KAP)调查以及犬生态学研究的文章。我们提取了有关研究地点、年份和每项研究的其他详细信息,如狂犬病流行率、肇事犬的一般特征、犬疫苗接种状况和寻求医疗行为。
在 1978 年至 2020 年期间,有 90 篇已发表的文章符合我们的纳入标准。狂犬病病毒抗原检测的流行率在 3%至 28%之间,北部的研究较多。大多数咬伤是从犬咬伤研究中未经挑衅的(36.4%-97%),由疫苗接种率较低的犬引起(12-38%)。更大比例的咬犬是有主犬(31-90%)。只有一小部分研究(6%;n=32)有咬伤犬的实验室确认。在生态学研究中调查的犬中,土犬占多数(62-98%),主要用于安全目的(52-98%),大多数州的疫苗接种率在 15%至 38%之间。在远离狂犬病诊断设施的地区进行的研究报告了更多的人类狂犬病病例和较少的犬狂犬病病例。
要实现到 2030 年消除通过犬类传播的人类狂犬病,还需要进行重大改进。