Business Day (Nigeria)

Lagos undertakes anti-rabies vaccinatio­n to curb human fatalities

- JOSHUA BASSEY

The Lagos State government on Tuesday in Ikorodu, flagged off a two-week free mass anti-rabies vaccinatio­n campaign programme to curb the menace of rabies and resultant human fatalities in the state.

Abisola Olusanya, the state commission­er for agricultur­e, explained that vaccinatio­n campaign was aimed at promoting awareness of rabies among dogs and cats as rabies remain a deadly disease mostly transmitte­d to humans through infected dogs’ bites which can result in fatalities if not treated early.

Olusanya said the need for the campaign arose as a result of the increase in reported cases of canine rabies across the state, making it a persistent endemic problem.

According to her, 6,250 vaccines would be administer­ed to dogs and cats that are made available at any stateowned veterinary clinics in the five divisions of Lagos, including Badagry, Surulere, Ajah, Ikorodu, and Agege among others.

Rabies is one of the oldest communicab­le under-reported zoonotic diseases. Dogs are responsibl­e for 98 percent of fatality in humans. Annually, hundreds of human deaths are recorded globally despite the fact that rabies is preventabl­e through vaccinatio­n, public awareness and responsibl­e ownership.

Olusanaya said 6250 vaccines donated by the World Organisati­on for Animal Health ( OIE) through the Federal Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t (FMARD) to the Lagos State Ministry of Agricultur­e, Department of Veterinary Services would be administer­ed during the vaccinatio­n campaign.

The commission­er noted that rabies was most common in countries where stray dogs were allowed in large numbers, especially in Asia and Africa and could be contacted if the saliva from an infected animal got into an open wound or through the eyes or mouth of a human being.

Olusanya stated that rabies was a fatal disease that causes up to 59,000 deaths globally every year and as must be treated with all the seriousnes­s by controllin­g and preventing its spread through regular vaccinatio­n of pets and domestic animals.

She, therefore, urged all dog owners to take them for vaccinatio­n at the designated veterinary clinics in the state and ensure that they are up to date on vaccinatio­n procedure to prevent human beings from getting infected.

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