Rabies PDF NSTP
Rabies PDF NSTP
• In 1890 Pasteur
created the rabies
vaccine and saved
9 year old Joseph
Meister after he
had been bit by a
rabid dog
Introduction
RABIES IN HUMANS
• Victims of dog bites are children under the age of
15
• It is transmitted to other animals and humans
through close contact with saliva from infected
animals
• Tissues from individuals with rabies must not be
used in transplant procedures
Incubation Period
NOTE
• The closer the bite
to the brain, the
shorter the
incubation.
• Rabies virus travels
1-1.2 cm per day
Pathogenesis
• Bizarre behavior
• Agitation
• Seizures
• Difficulty in drinking
• Patients will be able to eat
solids
• Afraid of water -
Hydrophobia.
Signs and Symptoms
Myth
• Responsible dog ownership means you feed your dog well.
Fact
• Responsible dog ownership means that you register your dog
with the local authorities, you annually vaccinate your dog
for rabies, you keep your dogs from roaming the streets,
and you feed and care for your dog in an ethically
responsible manner.
Myths and Facts (FAO, UN)
Myth
• Rabies virus can be detected and treated by traditional
medicine when traditional healers treat bite wounds.
Fact
• To date, there is no traditional medicine that is proven effective
against the rabies virus. Therefore, even if a traditional healer
treats your bite wound, you should still proceed to a medical
center or hospital so the wound can be properly cleaned and
disinfected, and so you can get a post-exposure rabies vaccine.
Myths and Facts (FAO, UN)
Myth
• Rabies is transmitted only by the bite of an animal.
Fact
• Transmission by the bite of a rabid animal is the most common way.
• Rabies can also be transmitted through a scratch inflicted by a dog or
an animal if fresh saliva is on the nail that causes the scratch.
• Airborne transmission of rabies may also occur when handling bat
guano or in bat caves. Aerosol transmission has been implied in four
reports of human rabies cases and documented in experimental work
with animals.
Myths and Facts (FAO, UN)
Myth
• Dog vaccines prevent your dog from getting rabies for
only a few months.
Fact
• If your dogs are vaccinated against rabies, they are
protected for at least one year with each vaccine.
Myths and Facts (FAO, UN)
Myth
• If a traditional healer treats a bite wound, there is no
need to see a doctor or go to a medical centre or
hospital.
Fact
• People with bite wounds that are only treated with
traditional medicine are at greater risk of death from
rabies, once a person shows clinical symptoms, death is
unpreventable.
Myths and Facts (FAO, UN)
Myth
• Dog owners can choose whether or not to vaccinate
their dogs against rabies.
Fact
• As a dog owner, you are required to vaccinate your dogs
against rabies every year. This protects you, your family
and friends, your community, and your dogs.
Myths and Facts
MYTH
• “Bawang and Tandok” can treat and cure rabies
Fact
• Only anti-rabies vaccines can effectively cure
rabies
“The control and elimination of rabies in dogs
through vaccination remain the only cost-
effective way to sustainably protect humans from
contracting the disease.”
World Organization for Animal Health (OIE)
Animal Welfare
Animal Welfare
Sows in
stalls
Naturalness
Restriction of oral
and social behavior
So what is “WELFARE”?
Section 9:
• All laws, acts, decrees, executive orders, rules and
regulations inconsistent with the provisions of this Act
are hereby repealed or modified accordingly.
Section 10:
• This Act shall be take effect fifteen (15) days after its
publication in at least two (2) newspapers of general
circulation.
Reflection