The Role of Dog Population Management in Rabies Elimination—A Review of Current Approaches and Future Opportunities

Free-roaming dogs and rabies transmission are integrally linked across many low-income countries, and large unmanaged dog populations can be daunting to rabies control program planners. Dog population management (DPM) is a multifaceted concept that aims to improve the health and well-being of free-r...

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Main Authors: Louise H. Taylor, Ryan M. Wallace, Deepashree Balaram, Joann M. Lindenmayer, Douglas C. Eckery, Beryl Mutonono-Watkiss, Ellie Parravani, Louis H. Nel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Veterinary Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fvets.2017.00109/full
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spelling doaj-73e2fd82b2334bbd92d40fd72e401c552020-11-24T23:58:51ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Veterinary Science2297-17692017-07-01410.3389/fvets.2017.00109238070The Role of Dog Population Management in Rabies Elimination—A Review of Current Approaches and Future OpportunitiesLouise H. Taylor0Ryan M. Wallace1Deepashree Balaram2Joann M. Lindenmayer3Douglas C. Eckery4Beryl Mutonono-Watkiss5Ellie Parravani6Louis H. Nel7Louis H. Nel8Global Alliance for Rabies Control, Manhattan, KS, United StatesCenters for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, United StatesGlobal Alliance for Rabies Control, Manhattan, KS, United StatesHumane Society International, Washington, DC, United StatesNational Wildlife Research Center, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, CO, United StatesWorld Animal Protection, London, United KingdomWorld Animal Protection, London, United KingdomGlobal Alliance for Rabies Control, Manhattan, KS, United StatesDepartment of Microbiology and Plant Pathology, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South AfricaFree-roaming dogs and rabies transmission are integrally linked across many low-income countries, and large unmanaged dog populations can be daunting to rabies control program planners. Dog population management (DPM) is a multifaceted concept that aims to improve the health and well-being of free-roaming dogs, reduce problems they may cause, and may also aim to reduce dog population size. In theory, DPM can facilitate more effective rabies control. Community engagement focused on promoting responsible dog ownership and better veterinary care could improve the health of individual animals and dog vaccination coverage, thus reducing rabies transmission. Humane DPM tools, such as sterilization, could theoretically reduce dog population turnover and size, allowing rabies vaccination coverage to be maintained more easily. However, it is important to understand local dog populations and community attitudes toward them in order to determine whether and how DPM might contribute to rabies control and which DPM tools would be most successful. In practice, there is very limited evidence of DPM tools achieving reductions in the size or turnover of dog populations in canine rabies-endemic areas. Different DPM tools are frequently used together and combined with rabies vaccinations, but full impact assessments of DPM programs are not usually available, and therefore, evaluation of tools is difficult. Surgical sterilization is the most frequently documented tool and has successfully reduced dog population size and turnover in a few low-income settings. However, DPM programs are mostly conducted in urban settings and are usually not government funded, raising concerns about their applicability in rural settings and sustainability over time. Technical demands, costs, and the time necessary to achieve population-level impacts are major barriers. Given their potential value, we urgently need more evidence of the effectiveness of DPM tools in the context of canine rabies control. Cheaper, less labor-intensive tools for dog sterilization will be extremely valuable in realizing the potential benefits of reduced population turnover and size. No one DPM tool will fit all situations, but if DPM objectives are achieved dog populations may be stabilized or even reduced, facilitating higher dog vaccination coverages that will benefit rabies elimination efforts.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fvets.2017.00109/fullcanine rabiesdog population managementdog population controlfree-roaming dogsstray dogsresponsible dog ownership
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Louise H. Taylor
Ryan M. Wallace
Deepashree Balaram
Joann M. Lindenmayer
Douglas C. Eckery
Beryl Mutonono-Watkiss
Ellie Parravani
Louis H. Nel
Louis H. Nel
spellingShingle Louise H. Taylor
Ryan M. Wallace
Deepashree Balaram
Joann M. Lindenmayer
Douglas C. Eckery
Beryl Mutonono-Watkiss
Ellie Parravani
Louis H. Nel
Louis H. Nel
The Role of Dog Population Management in Rabies Elimination—A Review of Current Approaches and Future Opportunities
Frontiers in Veterinary Science
canine rabies
dog population management
dog population control
free-roaming dogs
stray dogs
responsible dog ownership
author_facet Louise H. Taylor
Ryan M. Wallace
Deepashree Balaram
Joann M. Lindenmayer
Douglas C. Eckery
Beryl Mutonono-Watkiss
Ellie Parravani
Louis H. Nel
Louis H. Nel
author_sort Louise H. Taylor
title The Role of Dog Population Management in Rabies Elimination—A Review of Current Approaches and Future Opportunities
title_short The Role of Dog Population Management in Rabies Elimination—A Review of Current Approaches and Future Opportunities
title_full The Role of Dog Population Management in Rabies Elimination—A Review of Current Approaches and Future Opportunities
title_fullStr The Role of Dog Population Management in Rabies Elimination—A Review of Current Approaches and Future Opportunities
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Dog Population Management in Rabies Elimination—A Review of Current Approaches and Future Opportunities
title_sort role of dog population management in rabies elimination—a review of current approaches and future opportunities
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Veterinary Science
issn 2297-1769
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Free-roaming dogs and rabies transmission are integrally linked across many low-income countries, and large unmanaged dog populations can be daunting to rabies control program planners. Dog population management (DPM) is a multifaceted concept that aims to improve the health and well-being of free-roaming dogs, reduce problems they may cause, and may also aim to reduce dog population size. In theory, DPM can facilitate more effective rabies control. Community engagement focused on promoting responsible dog ownership and better veterinary care could improve the health of individual animals and dog vaccination coverage, thus reducing rabies transmission. Humane DPM tools, such as sterilization, could theoretically reduce dog population turnover and size, allowing rabies vaccination coverage to be maintained more easily. However, it is important to understand local dog populations and community attitudes toward them in order to determine whether and how DPM might contribute to rabies control and which DPM tools would be most successful. In practice, there is very limited evidence of DPM tools achieving reductions in the size or turnover of dog populations in canine rabies-endemic areas. Different DPM tools are frequently used together and combined with rabies vaccinations, but full impact assessments of DPM programs are not usually available, and therefore, evaluation of tools is difficult. Surgical sterilization is the most frequently documented tool and has successfully reduced dog population size and turnover in a few low-income settings. However, DPM programs are mostly conducted in urban settings and are usually not government funded, raising concerns about their applicability in rural settings and sustainability over time. Technical demands, costs, and the time necessary to achieve population-level impacts are major barriers. Given their potential value, we urgently need more evidence of the effectiveness of DPM tools in the context of canine rabies control. Cheaper, less labor-intensive tools for dog sterilization will be extremely valuable in realizing the potential benefits of reduced population turnover and size. No one DPM tool will fit all situations, but if DPM objectives are achieved dog populations may be stabilized or even reduced, facilitating higher dog vaccination coverages that will benefit rabies elimination efforts.
topic canine rabies
dog population management
dog population control
free-roaming dogs
stray dogs
responsible dog ownership
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fvets.2017.00109/full
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