1. Assessing the impact of public education on a preventable zoonotic disease: rabies
- Author
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Daniel L. Horton, E. S. Marshall, Eric Jon Tongren, Anthony R. Fooks, E. Maes, A. M. Whatmore, Marika Geleishvili, E. Hasanov, S. Zeynalova, Ashley C. Banyard, and Lorraine M. McElhinney
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Azerbaijan ,Rabies ,Epidemiology ,030231 tropical medicine ,Health Promotion ,Disease ,Disease cluster ,03 medical and health sciences ,Dogs ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Environmental health ,Animals ,Humans ,Medicine ,Bites and Stings ,Dog Diseases ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Cluster method ,Public education ,Health Education ,Immunization Schedule ,Public awareness ,2. Zero hunger ,KAP survey ,business.industry ,Zoonosis ,Middle Aged ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,zoonosis ,vaccination ,medicine.disease ,Original Papers ,3. Good health ,Vaccination ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Infectious Diseases ,Rabies Vaccines ,Female ,business ,public awareness ,Zoonoses and Arboviruses - Abstract
SUMMARYEffective methods to increase awareness of preventable infectious diseases are key components of successful control programmes. Rabies is an example of a disease with significant impact, where public awareness is variable. A recent awareness campaign in a rabies endemic region of Azerbaijan provided a unique opportunity to assess the efficacy of such campaigns. A cluster cross-sectional survey concerning rabies was undertaken following the awareness campaign in 600 households in 38 randomly selected towns, in districts covered by the campaign and matched control regions. This survey demonstrated that the relatively simple awareness campaign was effective at improving knowledge of rabies symptoms and vaccination schedules. Crucially, those in the awareness campaign group were also 1·4 times more likely to report that they had vaccinated their pets, an essential component of human rabies prevention. In addition, low knowledge of appropriate post-exposure treatment and animal sources of rabies provide information useful for future public awareness campaigns in the region and other similar areas.
- Published
- 2017