Public Preference for Pet-Rabies Prophylaxis: Opportunities and Information Dissemination
Risky human behavior and high density of rabies vectors in urban environments combine to increase the risk of rabies. Pet vaccination, wildlife vector management, and public health education may be the most efficient ways to prevent urban rabies epidemics. Racial, ethnic, and socio-economic factors...
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2017-09-01
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doaj-a1213080ff294689aa2d2dc392be7b5c2020-11-25T00:47:54ZengMDPI AGTropical Medicine and Infectious Disease2414-63662017-09-01234610.3390/tropicalmed2030046tropicalmed2030046Public Preference for Pet-Rabies Prophylaxis: Opportunities and Information DisseminationMaria B. Palamar0Maria T. Correa1Nils M. Peterson2Christopher S. DePerno3NC Wildlife Resources Commission, 1751 Varsity Dr., Raleigh, NC 27606, USANC State University College of Veterinary Medicine, 1060 William Moore Dr., Raleigh, NC 27606, USANC State University College of Natural Resources, Fisheries and Wildlife Conservation Biology, Raleigh, NC 27606, USANC State University College of Natural Resources, Fisheries and Wildlife Conservation Biology, Raleigh, NC 27606, USARisky human behavior and high density of rabies vectors in urban environments combine to increase the risk of rabies. Pet vaccination, wildlife vector management, and public health education may be the most efficient ways to prevent urban rabies epidemics. Racial, ethnic, and socio-economic factors influence the use of low-cost rabies vaccination clinics, understanding rabies reporting requirements, and learning preferences. In collaboration with the City of Greensboro and Animal Control in Guilford County, NC, we conducted a survey of rabies prevention and transmission across socio-economic strata representing Latinos, African Americans, and Whites, and different income and education levels. Compliance with vaccination was low among Latinos; African Americans and Latinos were not aware of low-cost rabies vaccination clinics; and most respondents were willing to report rabid animals but did not know whom to call. White respondents preferred online information delivery, whereas Latinos and African Americans preferred postal mail. Communication targeting the public requires the consideration of different message decoding and interpretation based on the ethnicity, income, and educational level, and other barriers such as language. Differing message delivery methods may be required to achieve full dissemination.https://www.mdpi.com/2414-6366/2/3/46rabiesrabies preventionpublic health outreachraceethnicity |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Maria B. Palamar Maria T. Correa Nils M. Peterson Christopher S. DePerno |
spellingShingle |
Maria B. Palamar Maria T. Correa Nils M. Peterson Christopher S. DePerno Public Preference for Pet-Rabies Prophylaxis: Opportunities and Information Dissemination Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease rabies rabies prevention public health outreach race ethnicity |
author_facet |
Maria B. Palamar Maria T. Correa Nils M. Peterson Christopher S. DePerno |
author_sort |
Maria B. Palamar |
title |
Public Preference for Pet-Rabies Prophylaxis: Opportunities and Information Dissemination |
title_short |
Public Preference for Pet-Rabies Prophylaxis: Opportunities and Information Dissemination |
title_full |
Public Preference for Pet-Rabies Prophylaxis: Opportunities and Information Dissemination |
title_fullStr |
Public Preference for Pet-Rabies Prophylaxis: Opportunities and Information Dissemination |
title_full_unstemmed |
Public Preference for Pet-Rabies Prophylaxis: Opportunities and Information Dissemination |
title_sort |
public preference for pet-rabies prophylaxis: opportunities and information dissemination |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease |
issn |
2414-6366 |
publishDate |
2017-09-01 |
description |
Risky human behavior and high density of rabies vectors in urban environments combine to increase the risk of rabies. Pet vaccination, wildlife vector management, and public health education may be the most efficient ways to prevent urban rabies epidemics. Racial, ethnic, and socio-economic factors influence the use of low-cost rabies vaccination clinics, understanding rabies reporting requirements, and learning preferences. In collaboration with the City of Greensboro and Animal Control in Guilford County, NC, we conducted a survey of rabies prevention and transmission across socio-economic strata representing Latinos, African Americans, and Whites, and different income and education levels. Compliance with vaccination was low among Latinos; African Americans and Latinos were not aware of low-cost rabies vaccination clinics; and most respondents were willing to report rabid animals but did not know whom to call. White respondents preferred online information delivery, whereas Latinos and African Americans preferred postal mail. Communication targeting the public requires the consideration of different message decoding and interpretation based on the ethnicity, income, and educational level, and other barriers such as language. Differing message delivery methods may be required to achieve full dissemination. |
topic |
rabies rabies prevention public health outreach race ethnicity |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2414-6366/2/3/46 |
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