PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (May 2020)

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

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008317
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 5
p. e0008317

Abstract

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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.