Litcius/Paper detail

Long-range movements coupled with heterogeneous incubation period sustain dog rabies at the national scale in Africa

Davide Colombi, Chiara Poletto, Emmanuel Nakouné, Hervé Bourhy, Vittoria Colizza

2020PLoS neglected tropical diseases29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Dog-transmitted rabies is responsible for more than 98% of human cases worldwide, remaining a persistent problem in developing countries. Mass vaccination targets predominantly major cities, often compromising disease control due to re-introductions. Previous work suggested that areas neighboring cities may behave as the source of these re-introductions. To evaluate this hypothesis, we introduce a spatially explicit metapopulation model for rabies diffusion in Central African Republic. Calibrated on epidemiological data for the capital city, Bangui, the model predicts that long-range movements are essential for continuous re-introductions of rabies-exposed dogs across settlements, eased by the large fluctuations of the incubation period. Bangui's neighborhood, instead, would not be enough to self-sustain the epidemic, contrary to previous expectations. Our findings suggest that restricting long-range travels may be very efficient in limiting rabies persistence in a large and fragmented dog population. Our framework can be applied to other geographical contexts where dog rabies is endemic.

Topics & Concepts

RabiesMetapopulationWildlifeGeographyLyssavirusPopulationRange (aeronautics)Human settlementRabies virusPersistence (discontinuity)VaccinationSocioeconomicsBiologyDemographyEnvironmental healthEcologyVirologyMedicineRhabdoviridaeEconomicsEngineeringBiological dispersalGeotechnical engineeringSociologyMaterials scienceComposite materialArchaeologyRabies epidemiology and controlVirology and Viral DiseasesMicrobial infections and disease research