Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa
Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
BMJ Open. 2021 Dec 2;11(12):e048551. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-048551.
The objective of this scoping review was to map the current situation and available evidence and gaps on rabies morbidity, mortality, integrated rabies surveillance programmes, and existing prevention and control strategies in Africa.
We conducted a systematic scoping review following the Joanna Briggs methodology and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for scoping reviews checklist. Medline, Embase, CINAHL (EBSCOHost), Scopus, Web of Science and rabies web conferences were used to search for peer-reviewed publications between January 1946 and May 2020. Two researchers reviewed the studies and extracted data based on author (year) and region, study design and data collection duration, participants/comparators, interventions, control conditions/exposures and outcomes (rabies mortality and morbidity) and key findings/gaps/challenges. The results were reported narratively using Arksey and O'Malley's methodological framework.
Electronic search yielded 2775 records, of which 43 studies were included. A total of 543 714 bite victims were censored through the included studies. Most of the victims were less than 15 years of age. The studies included rabies morbidity (21) and mortality (15) fluctuating in space and time across Africa depending on countries' rabies prevention and control practices (16). Others were surveillance (nine studies); surveillance and prevention (five studies); management and control (seven studies); and surveillance, prevention and control (six studies). We found challenges in rabies reporting, existing dog vaccination programmes and post-exposure prophylaxis availability or compliance.
This study found challenges for dog rabies control and elimination in Africa and the need for a policy to drive the goal of zero dog-transmitted rabies to humans by 2030.This is an open-access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build on this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated and the use is non-commercial (see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).
本范围综述旨在绘制非洲狂犬病发病率、死亡率、综合狂犬病监测计划以及现有预防和控制策略的现状和现有证据及差距。
我们按照乔安娜·布里格斯方法和用于系统综述和荟萃分析扩展的首选报告项目清单进行了系统的范围综述。使用 Medline、Embase、CINAHL(EBSCOHost)、Scopus、Web of Science 和狂犬病网络会议,检索了 1946 年 1 月至 2020 年 5 月期间的同行评审出版物。两名研究人员根据作者(年份)和地区、研究设计和数据收集时间、参与者/对照、干预措施、对照条件/暴露和结果(狂犬病发病率和死亡率)以及主要发现/差距/挑战,对研究进行了审查和提取数据。结果使用阿斯基和奥马利的方法论框架进行叙述性报告。
电子检索产生了 2775 条记录,其中包括 43 项研究。通过纳入的研究,共有 543714 名咬伤受害者被审查。大多数受害者年龄小于 15 岁。这些研究包括在非洲各地和时间上变化的狂犬病发病率(21 项)和死亡率(15 项),这取决于各国的狂犬病预防和控制实践(16 项)。其他研究包括监测(9 项研究);监测和预防(5 项研究);管理和控制(7 项研究);以及监测、预防和控制(6 项研究)。我们发现狂犬病报告、现有的犬疫苗接种计划以及暴露后预防的可获得性或依从性存在挑战。
本研究发现,非洲的犬类狂犬病控制和消除存在挑战,需要制定一项政策,以推动到 2030 年实现零犬传播人类狂犬病的目标。这是一篇开放获取文章,根据知识共享署名非商业许可 4.0 协议分发,允许在其他地方分发、混音、改编、构建本作品,非商业使用,并引用原始作品。