TY - JOUR
T1 - Dog ownership, abundance and potential for bat-borne rabies spillover in Chile
AU - Astorga, F.
AU - Escobar, L. E.
AU - Poo-Muñoz, D. A.
AU - Medina-Vogel, G.
N1 - Funding Information:
Authors express their gratitude to Verónica Yung and Myriam Favi for the data of dog-cases in Chile, indispensable for this manuscript. We also thank Maria Jose Peralta for her contribution in dog demography data collection, and Cristina Toledo for rabies data collection. Abigail Morrison reviewed the English grammar. FA and DP are supported by the PhD scholarship Ecology and Natural Resources, Universidad Andrés Bello, Santiago, Chile. LEE is supported by the Global Emerging Infectious Disease Surveillance and Disease System (GEIS) Grant P0435_14_UN .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015.
PY - 2015/3/1
Y1 - 2015/3/1
N2 - Rabies is a viral infectious disease that affects all mammals, including humans. Factors associated with the incidence of rabies include the presence and density of susceptible hosts and potential reservoirs. Currently, Chile is declared free of canine-related rabies, but there is an overpopulation of dogs within the country and an emergence of rabies in bats. Our objectives are to determine potential areas for bat-borne rabies spillover into dog populations expressed as a risk map, and to explore some key features of dog ownership, abundance, and management in Chile. For the risk map, our variables included a dog density surface (dog/km2) and a distribution model of bat-borne rabies presence. From literature review, we obtained dog data from 112 municipalities, which represent 33% of the total municipalities (339). At country level, based on previous studies the median human per dog ratio was 4.8, with 64% of houses containing at least one dog, and a median of 0.9 dog per house. We estimate a national median of 5.3dog/km2, and a median of 3680 dogs by municipality, from which we estimate a total population of 3.5×106 owned dogs. The antirabies vaccination presented a median of 21% of dogs by municipality, and 29% are unrestricted to some degree. Human per dog ratio have a significant (but weak) negative association with human density. Unrestricted dogs have a negative association with human density and income, and a positive association with the number of dogs per house. Considering dog density by municipality, and areas of potential bat-borne rabies occurrence, we found that 163 (~48%) of Chilean municipalities are at risk of rabies spillover from bats to dogs. Risk areas are concentrated in urban settlements, including Santiago, Chile's capital. To validate the risk map, we included cases of rabies in dogs from the last 27 years; all fell within high-risk areas of our map, confirming the assertive risk prediction. Our results suggest that the use of dog population parameters may be informative to determine risk areas for bat-rabies spillover events. In addition, we confirm that dog abundance is a neglected and emerging public health concern in Chile, particularly within urban areas, which deserves prompt intervention.
AB - Rabies is a viral infectious disease that affects all mammals, including humans. Factors associated with the incidence of rabies include the presence and density of susceptible hosts and potential reservoirs. Currently, Chile is declared free of canine-related rabies, but there is an overpopulation of dogs within the country and an emergence of rabies in bats. Our objectives are to determine potential areas for bat-borne rabies spillover into dog populations expressed as a risk map, and to explore some key features of dog ownership, abundance, and management in Chile. For the risk map, our variables included a dog density surface (dog/km2) and a distribution model of bat-borne rabies presence. From literature review, we obtained dog data from 112 municipalities, which represent 33% of the total municipalities (339). At country level, based on previous studies the median human per dog ratio was 4.8, with 64% of houses containing at least one dog, and a median of 0.9 dog per house. We estimate a national median of 5.3dog/km2, and a median of 3680 dogs by municipality, from which we estimate a total population of 3.5×106 owned dogs. The antirabies vaccination presented a median of 21% of dogs by municipality, and 29% are unrestricted to some degree. Human per dog ratio have a significant (but weak) negative association with human density. Unrestricted dogs have a negative association with human density and income, and a positive association with the number of dogs per house. Considering dog density by municipality, and areas of potential bat-borne rabies occurrence, we found that 163 (~48%) of Chilean municipalities are at risk of rabies spillover from bats to dogs. Risk areas are concentrated in urban settlements, including Santiago, Chile's capital. To validate the risk map, we included cases of rabies in dogs from the last 27 years; all fell within high-risk areas of our map, confirming the assertive risk prediction. Our results suggest that the use of dog population parameters may be informative to determine risk areas for bat-rabies spillover events. In addition, we confirm that dog abundance is a neglected and emerging public health concern in Chile, particularly within urban areas, which deserves prompt intervention.
KW - Bat-borne
KW - Dog abundance
KW - Dog ownership
KW - Rabies
KW - Risk map
KW - Spillover
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84923083320&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2015.01.002
DO - 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2015.01.002
M3 - Article
C2 - 25656549
AN - SCOPUS:84923083320
SN - 0167-5877
VL - 118
SP - 397
EP - 405
JO - Preventive Veterinary Medicine
JF - Preventive Veterinary Medicine
IS - 4
ER -