National Rabies Control Programme

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National Rabies Control Programme(NRCP)

News Highlights:

  • The Central Government has launched the National Rabies Control Programme (NRCP) for the prevention and control of Rabies.
  • The programme is under the ambit of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

National Rabies Control Programme (NRCP)

  • Strategies:
    • To prevent and control rabies, the Central Government has started the National Rabies Control Programme (NRCP). According to National Center for Disease Control (NCDC) information, the program’s strategies are as follows:
    • Rabies vaccine and rabies immunoglobulin are provided through national free drug programmes.
    • Training on rabies prevention and control, surveillance, intersectoral coordination, and proper animal bite management.
    • Strengthening surveillance of animal bites and rabies death reporting.
    • Creating awareness about rabies prevention.
  • Objectives of NRCP:
    • Healthcare workers should receive training on proper animal bite management and rabies post-exposure prevention.
    • Advocacy for states to adopt and practice the intradermal method of post-exposure treatment for victims of animal bites and pre-exposure prophylaxis for high-risk groups.
    • Strengthening the system for monitoring human rabies.
    • Improvement of Regional Labs Under NRCP for Rabies Diagnosis.
    • Advocacy, communication, and social mobilisation are used to raise awareness in the neighbourhood.

What are Rabies?

  • About:
    • Rabies is a viral disease that is spread through an animal bite such as a dog. It is caused by the infection of the rabies virus. 
    • The infection caused by this leads to encephalomyelitis, i.e. the inflammation of the brain as well as the spinal cord. 
    • The transmission of the virus happens through the saliva and affects the CNS or Central nervous system. 
    • This virus belongs to a family called Rhabdoviridae. 
  • Carriers:
    • Any mammal can get rabies. The most common wild reservoirs of rabies are raccoons, skunks, bats, and foxes. 
    • Domestic mammals can also get rabies. Cats, cattle, and dogs are rabid domestic animals most frequently reported.
  • Transmission:
    • The dog affected by rabies transmits the disease to the human through saliva. 
    • This virus enters the human body’s tissues and starts to multiply. The transmission of disease sometimes might even happen from animal to animal also. 
    • After it has affected the tissues, the virus travels to the central nervous system through the spinal cord. 
    • Then it reaches the brain and causes a serious brain disorder called encephalitis which in turn causes a number of symptoms to arise in the human body. 
    • There are chances of it causing the death of the person.
    • The disease has an incubation period of about 3-12 weeks; later, it progresses with various symptoms.
  • Symptoms Of Rabies:
    • Fever, Headache, Nausea, Vomiting
    • Anxiety, Confusion, Hyperactivity, Hallucinations, Insomnia
    • Difficulty swallowing
    • Excessive salivation
    • Partial paralysis
    • Fear brought on by attempts to drink fluids because of difficulty swallowing water, etc.

Initiatives to control rabies:

  • Animal Birth Control (Dogs) Regulations, 2023:
    • To limit the dog population, the Animal Birth Control (Dogs) Regulations, 2023 have been proposed by the Animal Welfare Board of India (AWBI) to the appropriate authorities.
    • The main emphasis of the regulations is on stray dog anti-rabies vaccination and stray dog sterilisation as population control measures.
    • It can reduce the transmission of rabies.
  • National Action Plan For Dog Mediated Rabies Elimination (NAPRE):
    • Ministry of Health & Family Welfare and Ministry of Fisheries Animal Husbandry & Dairying, Government of India jointly launched ‘National Action Plan For Dog Mediated Rabies Elimination (NAPRE) from India by 2030’. 
    • It is a holistic approach to health, keeping in mind human-animal interaction and their broader interaction with the environment can help alleviate such challenges.
  • Local bodies’ awareness programme
    • The local bodies are responsible for managing and controlling the stray dog population.
    • communication and social mobilisation are used to raise awareness in the local areas.

Pic Courtesy: Freepik

Content Source: PIB

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Q). Consider the following statements about Rabies

1. It is a zoonotic viral disease that is fatal but preventable.

2. More than 99% of human deaths due to rabies are caused by dog-mediated rabies.

3. It is transmitted through airborne droplets via fine mist, dust, aerosols, or liquids.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

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