The Phnom Penh Post

Rabies vaccinatio­n campaign rolling out across capital

- Chea Sokny

A FREE rabies vaccinatio­n campaign to inoculate Phnom Penh’s dogs against the deadly viral disease has launched in the capital, the General Directorat­e of Animal Health and Production (GDAHP) announced.

GDAHP said the free rabies vaccinatio­ns for dogs in Phnom Penh – being conducted in collaborat­ion with Mission Rabies and Animal Rescue Cambodia, as well as other local partners – is to run until June 2.

“We are calling on all dog owners in Phnom Penh to protect their family, friends and communitie­s by getting their dogs vaccinated against rabies,” GDAHP said in a social media post.

Mission Rabies said on May 19 that vaccinatio­ns would be staggered across districts in Phnom Penh following a set schedule, with informatio­n on when the campaign arrives in each area available on the organisati­on’s website.

According to Mission Rabies, vaccinatin­g dogs against rabies is the least expensive method of preventing transmissi­on of the deadly disease.

“In Cambodia, 85 per cent of all dogs are owned, so education is essential for successful rabies prevention,” said the UK-based non-profit organisati­on.

Education on rabies, preventing being bitten and treating wounds post-bite were effective tools for communitie­s to use in protecting themselves against the deadly disease, it added.

Nuth Sambath, president of the Institute of Medicine, Biology and Agricultur­e at the Royal Academy of Cambodia, said rabies is an infectious disease carried in the saliva of a number of animals including

dogs, cats and rats.

He said the launch of the free rabies vaccinatio­n campaign for dogs across the capital was the most effective way of preventing human deaths from the disease.

“Vaccinatin­g all dogs in Phnom Penh is the best way of protecting humans against rabies as it will prevent the city’s canine population from having rabies and infecting people

through bites,” Sambath said.

If someone is bitten by a dog, they must immediatel­y visit a specialist hospital to be vaccinated against getting rabies, he added.

According to Mission Rabies, Cambodia has one of the highest rates of death from rabies in the world, with 99 per cent of all mortalitie­s in the Kingdom caused by dogs.

It said that while around 600,000 people are bitten by dogs in Cambodia every year, the majority do not go for treatment afterwards.

GDAHP, Mission Rabies, Institut Pasteur du Cambodge, Animal Rescue Cambodia and Phnom Penh Animal Welfare Society (PPAWS) have been working together in Phnom Penh since 2020 to identify animals with rabies through cases of dogs biting humans.

 ?? GDAHP ?? A screenshot of a dog bitting its cage shared on social media.
GDAHP A screenshot of a dog bitting its cage shared on social media.

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