WEDNESDAY, April 24, 2024
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Rabies vaccination campaign steps up as infections spread

Rabies vaccination campaign steps up as infections spread

DISEASE RED ZONES DECLARED IN 22 PROVINCES AMID VACCINE SHORTAGES.

THE LIVESTOCK Development Department and other agencies are stepping up rabies vaccinations for dogs and cats after 22 provinces across the country have been announced as rabies “red zones”, with at least three human deaths attributed to the deadly disease reported so far this year – in Surin, Songkhla and Trang.

Rabies vaccination campaign steps up as infections spread
Authorities need to intensify the rate of vaccination as many people do not know that death is almost guaranteed if a person is bitten by an infected animal – usually a dog or cat – unless they quickly receive a full dose of vaccine.
However, local administrations in the Northeast region do not have enough vaccine to service all areas. 
There were 359 confirmed cases of rabies infections in animals reported in 37 provinces, mostly in the northeastern and southern regions, from the beginning of the year until Sunday, according to the Livestock Development Depart-ment’s rabies monitoring network. The outbreak has spread rapidly compared to last year with 315 confirmed cases in January and February this year, double the number over the same period in 2017. 
Nakhon Ratchasima Governor Wichian Chantharanothai said yesterday that he had ordered rabies centres be set up in all 32 districts of the province, where the outbreak has been detected in nine districts. 

Rabies vaccination campaign steps up as infections spread

A pet cat is tied down so it can be sterilised in Nakhon Ratchasima’s Muang district yesterday. Many Livestock Development Department officials are sterilising cats and dogs and protecting them against rabies in a bid to curb an outbreak of rabies.
Wichian added that the latest suspected rabies case involving a human had been reported in Soeng Sang district, where a 48-year-old man had died. He said the results of lab tests to confirm the cause of the death would be available this week, which might raise the official death toll to four.

Rabies vaccination campaign steps up as infections spread
 People in Ubon Ratchathani’s Natan district panicked yesterday after stray dogs bit people in Hat Chom Dao, according to Prakrong Buddapan, chief of Tambon Natan.
However, the district livestock authority said the stray dogs involved were not infected.
“Our major concern is that we don’t have enough vaccine for dogs and cats in the areas,” said Chavalit Litthisuth, chief of the Natan district livestock authority.
In Buri Ram’s Krasang district yesterday, Livestock Development Department and local administrative officials vaccinated 500 pet cats and dogs as well as strays in four villages in Tambon Ban Preu after a one-year-old cow died from unknown causes. Its carcass was destroyed after it was tested, but another cow in the same enclosure has since developed suspicious symptoms. 

Rabies vaccination campaign steps up as infections spread
Vaccinations were also stepped up in Loei’s Erawan district yesterday after two rabid dogs were found in nearby Tha Li and Na Haeo districts. A survey this year found that there were 70,000 cats and dogs in the northeastern province. 

Rabies vaccination campaign steps up as infections spread
In Tak’s Mae Sot district, public health volunteers in Tambon Mae Pa vaccinated more than 100 pet cats and dogs in 11 villages after authorities declared two villages as “zones under temporary watch” from February 27 through March 26.
In Trang’s Huai Yot district, officials vaccinated 1,000 pet and stray dogs, especially those in a five-kilometre radius of where a dog in Tambon Tha Ngew was recently found infected. 
Livestock Development Department deputy chief Chirasak Pipattanapongsophon last week blamed the virus’s spread on the fact that many pet owners had failed to take their animals in for vaccination and allowed them to stray outside, exposing them to rabid dogs. A failure to vaccinate pet animals is a petty offence punishable by a Bt200 fine per animal.
The bureaucracy managing the vaccinations, which has caused delays to some local bodies’ anti-rabies efforts, has also been blamed on social media as a factor contributing to the current outbreak. 
Meanwhile, in a case exemplifying the dysfunction, the mayor of Muang Nakhon Ratchasima’s Tambon Suranaree, Somyot Ratana-preeyanuch, has been ordered to pay back a budget that he had approved to buy rabies vaccines during a 2013 outbreak after an investigation. 
At the time, the authority to distribute vaccines was held by provincial livestock development offices, which were slow to make disbursements. 
Since late 2016, the Interior Ministry has allowed local administrative bodies to buy vaccines to ensure a more timely response in emergencies. 

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