4.6 Article

Spatiotemporal heterogeneity and determinants of canine rabies evidence at Local Government Area Level in Nigeria: Implications for rabies prevention and control

Journal

ONE HEALTH
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2022.100378

Keywords

Disparity; Environmental factors; Epidemiology; Nigeria; Rabies; Lyssavirus; Socioeconomic levels; Zoonosis

Funding

  1. Common-wealth Government
  2. University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
  3. Daniel Walker McLeod scholarship

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Canine rabies poses a significant risk in Nigeria, but there is a lack of reliable tools for evaluating existing control programs. This study found that most local governments in Nigeria have not been targeted for rabies surveillance or studies. Factors such as education level, poverty, population density, land use, and temperature were found to be associated with evidence of canine rabies.
Canine rabies poses a significant risk to humans and animals in Nigeria. However, the lack of reliable tools to evaluate the performance of existing canine rabies control programs to inform public health policy decisions poses a severe obstacle. We obtained canine rabies surveillance data from the National Veterinary Research Institute (NVRI) and supplemented these data with rabies diagnoses reported in the published studies from Nigeria. To uncover contextual factors (i.e., environmental and sociodemographic) associated with canine rabies evidence at the Local Government Area (LGA) level, we classified LGAs in Nigeria into four categories based on evidence availability (i.e., LGAs with NVRI data or published studies, both, or no evidence). We described the geographical and temporal variation in coverage. We fitted a multinomial regression model to examine the association between LGA level canine rabies evidence and potential sociodemographic and ecological determinants of canine rabies evidence. The effective annual testing during the 19 years was less than one dog/ 100,000 Nigerian resident-year. Our results showed that 58% of Nigerian LGAs (450/774) had not been targeted by the existing national rabies surveillance or studies on rabies, including ten states capitals with high human populations. While 16% (122/774) of Nigerian LGAs concentrated in Taraba, Adamawa, and Abia had canine rabies evidence from published studies, none of these LGAs was represented in the NVRI rabies surveillance data. We also observed an increasing trend in rabies evidence over time towards the eastern part of Nigeria. Our multinomial regression model indicated that education level, poverty, population density, land use and temperature were significantly associated with canine rabies evidence at the LGA level. This study underscores the value of combining canine rabies evidence from different sources to better understand the current disease situation for targeted intervention.

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