4.6 Review

Drivers of zoonotic disease risk in the Indian subcontinent: A scoping review

Journal

ONE HEALTH
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2021.100310

Keywords

Zoonoses; Zoonotic disease; Indian subcontinent; Leptospirosis; Rabies; Nipah virus

Funding

  1. UKRI ERA-NET RodentGate project [BB/V019872/1]
  2. UKRI MRC GCRF rodent zoonosis control project [MR/T029862/1]
  3. African Union EcoRodMan project [AURGII/1/006]
  4. U.S. Defense Threat Reduction Agency (PigFluCam+ project) [HDTRA1-18-1-0051]
  5. BBSRC [BB/V019872/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Literature on potential anthropogenic drivers of zoonotic disease risk in the Indian subcontinent is limited. Most studies focus on diseases such as rabies, Nipah virus, and leptospirosis, revealing gaps between disease knowledge and behavior. Further interdisciplinary research is needed to understand and address human behaviors that contribute to zoonotic disease risks in this region.
Literature on potential anthropogenic drivers of zoonotic disease risk in the Indian subcontinent is sparse. We conducted a scoping review to identify primary sources, published 2000-2020, to clarify what research exists and on which areas future research should focus. We summarised findings thematically by disease. Of 80 sources included, 78 (98%) were original research articles and two were conference abstracts. Study designs and methods were not always clearly described, but 74 (93%) were quantitative (including one randomised trial), five (6%) were mixed-methods, and one was qualitative. Most sources reported research from India (39%) or Bangladesh (31%), followed by Pakistan (9%), Nepal (9%), Bhutan and Sri Lanka (6% each). Topically, most focused on rabies (18; 23%), Nipah virus (16; 20%) or leptospirosis (11; 14%), while 12 (15%) did not focus on a disease but instead on knowledge in communities. People generally did not seek post-exposure prophylaxis for rabies even when vaccination programmes were available and they understood that rabies was fatal, instead often relying on traditional medicines. Similarly, people did not take precautions to protect themselves from leptospirosis infection, even when they were aware of the link with rice cultivation. Nipah was correlated with presence of bats near human habitation. Official information on diseases, modes of transmission and prevention was lacking, or shared informally between friends, relatives, and neighbours. Behaviour did not correspond to disease knowledge. This review identifies various human behaviours which may drive zoonotic disease risk in the Indian subcontinent. Increasing community knowledge and awareness alone is unlikely to be sufficient to successfully change these behaviours. Further research, using interdisciplinary and participatory methods, would improve understanding of risks and risk perceptions and thus help in co-designing context-specific, relevant interventions.

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