Journal of Infection and Public Health (Nov 2017)

The Middle East and Eastern Europe rabies Expert Bureau (MEEREB) third meeting: Lyon-France (7–8 April, 2015)

  • V. Picot,
  • A. Rasuli,
  • A. Abella-Rider,
  • M. Saadatian-Elahi,
  • A. Aikimbayev,
  • A. Barkia,
  • S. Benmaiz,
  • Z. Bouslama,
  • K. De Balogh,
  • A. Dehove,
  • F. Davlyatov,
  • F. Farahtaj,
  • G. Gongal,
  • A. Gholami,
  • P. Imnadze,
  • M. Issad,
  • S. Khoufi,
  • V. Nedosekov,
  • A. Rafila,
  • H. Rich,
  • A. Soufi,
  • J. Tuychiev,
  • N. Vranjes,
  • R. Vodopija,
  • I. Zaouia,
  • L. Nel

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
pp. 695 – 701

Abstract

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MEEREB is an inter-regional network of countries from North Africa, Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia that work together with the aim of improving rabies control and prevention at local, regional and global level. MEEREB members met for the third time in 2015 in France (Lyon) to review the current rabies situation within the network and to discuss the way forward the prospect of a One Health approach against rabies. Dogs were the main vector of transmission in all MEEREB countries except for Croatia and Serbia where foxes represented the primary source. The number of rabies animal cases reported in 2014 varied substantially between countries with Ukraine reporting the highest number of animal cases. Human cases still occur in North Africa and all Middle East and Eurasian countries while no cases of human rabies were reported in Croatia, Serbia and Romania, although cases of rabies were identified in both dogs and foxes in 2014. Participants concluded that MEEREB can act as a think-tank where countries can share data, information, experiences and best practices to jointly address challenges in rabies control and prevention. They called for elimination of dog-transmitted rabies through vaccine and rabies immunoglobulin stockpiles and implementation of a One Health approach to achieve rabies’s eradication. Keywords: MEEREB, Rabies, Epidemiology, Report