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Cadernos De Saude Publica | 2007

Current status of human rabies transmitted by dogs in Latin America

Maria Cristina Schneider; Albino Belotto; Maria Paz Adé; Saskia Hendrickx; Luis Fernando Leanes; Maria José de Freitas Rodrigues; Guilherme Medina; Eduardo Correa

Latin American countries made the political decision to eliminate human rabies transmitted by dogs by the year 2005. The purpose of the current study is to evaluate to what extent this goal has been reached. The epidemiological situation and control measures were analyzed and broken down within the countries by georeferencing. The 27 human cases reported in 2003 occurred in some 0.2% of the second-level geopolitical units (municipalities or counties) in the region, suggesting that the disease is a local problem. Several areas within the countries reported no more transmission of rabies in dogs. Nearly 1 million people potentially exposed to rabies received treatment. On average, 34,383 inhabitants per health post receive anti-rabies treatment (range: 4,300-148,043). Nearly 42 million dogs are vaccinated annually. Surveillance is considered fair according to the epidemiological criteria adopted by the study. Samples sent for rabies testing represent 0.05% of the estimated canine population (range: 0.001 to 0.2%). The countries are quite close to achieving the goal.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2011

Elimination of Neglected Diseases in Latin America and the Caribbean: A Mapping of Selected Diseases

Maria Cristina Schneider; Ximena Aguilera; Jarbas Barbosa da Silva Junior; Steven Kenyon Ault; Patricia Nájera; Julio Martinez; Raquel Requejo; Rubén Santiago Nicholls; Zaida E. Yadon; Juan Carlos Silva; Luis Fernando Leanes; Mirta Roses Periago

In Latin America and the Caribbean, around 195 million people live in poverty, a situation that increases the burden of some infectious diseases. Neglected diseases, in particular, are often restricted to poor, marginalized sections of the population. Tools exist to combat these diseases, making it imperative to work towards their elimination. In 2009, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) received a mandate to support the countries in the Region in eliminating neglected diseases and other poverty-related infections. The objective of this study is to analyze the presence of selected diseases using geo-processing techniques. Five diseases with information available at the first sub-national level (states) were mapped, showing the presence of the disease (“hotspots”) and overlap of diseases (“major hotspots”). In the 45 countries/territories (approximately 570 states) of the Region, there is: lymphatic filariasis in four countries (29 states), onchocerciasis in six countries (25 states), schistosomiasis in four countries (39 states), trachoma in three countries (29 states), and human rabies transmitted by dogs in ten countries (20 states). Of the 108 states with one or more of the selected diseases, 36 states present the diseases in overlapping areas (“major hotspots”). Additional information about soil-transmitted helminths was included. The analysis suggests a majority of the selected diseases are not widespread and can be considered part of an unfinished agenda with elimination as a goal. Integrated plans and a comprehensive approach, ensuring access to existing diagnostic and treatment methods, and establishing a multi-sectoral agenda that addresses social determinants, including access to adequate water and sanitation, are required. Future studies can include additional diseases, socio-economic and environmental variables.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2013

Progress towards eliminating canine rabies: policies and perspectives from Latin America and the Caribbean

Marco Vigilato; Alfonso Clavijo; Terezinha Knöbl; Hugo Marcelo Tamayo Silva; Ottorino Cosivi; Maria Cristina Schneider; Luis Fernando Leanes; Albino Belotto; Marcos A. Espinal

Human rabies transmitted by dogs is considered a neglected disease that can be eliminated in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) by 2015. The aim of this paper is to discuss canine rabies policies and projections for LAC regarding current strategies for achieving this target and to critically review the political, economic and geographical factors related to the successful elimination of this deadly disease in the context of the difficulties and challenges of the region. The strong political and technical commitment to control rabies in LAC in the 1980s, started with the regional programme coordinated by the Pan American Health Organization. National and subnational programmes involve a range of strategies including mass canine vaccination with more than 51 million doses of canine vaccine produced annually, pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis, improvements in disease diagnosis and intensive surveillance. Rabies incidence in LAC has dramatically declined over the last few decades, with laboratory confirmed dog rabies cases decreasing from approximately 25 000 in 1980 to less than 300 in 2010. Dog-transmitted human rabies cases also decreased from 350 to less than 10 during the same period. Several countries have been declared free of human cases of dog-transmitted rabies, and from the 35 countries in the Americas, there is now only notification of human rabies transmitted by dogs in seven countries (Bolivia, Peru, Honduras, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Guatemala and some states in north and northeast Brazil). Here, we emphasize the importance of the political commitment in the final progression towards disease elimination. The availability of strategies for rabies control, the experience of most countries in the region and the historical ties of solidarity between countries with the support of the scientific community are evidence to affirm that the elimination of dog-transmitted rabies can be achieved in the short term. The final efforts to confront the remaining obstacles, like achieving and sustaining high vaccination coverage in communities that are most impoverished or in remote locations, are faced by countries that struggle to allocate sufficient financial and human resources for rabies control. Continent-wide cooperation is therefore required in the final efforts to secure the free status of remaining countries in the Americas, which is key to the regional elimination of human rabies transmitted by dogs.


Revista De Saude Publica | 1996

Rabies control in Brazil from 1980 to 1990

Maria Cristina Schneider; George A. de Almeida; Lúcia Maria Souza; Nélio B. de Morares; Roberta C. Diaz

The epidemiological situation of rabies in Brazil at the period of 1980 to 1990, when the National Program for Rabies Prevention was implemented on a national scale, and which yielded positive results, is presented. The main controlling actions carried out in order to achieve these results are also described. Rabies in Brasil registered a considerable decrease in human and canine cases (78% and 90%, respectively), half way through the series of analyses undertaken for this study. Towards the end of the decade, the disease began to recrudesce, several cases occurring in some parts of the country, mainly in the northeastern region, where 70% of the total number of infections for 1990 was recorded. Moreover, human rabies transmitted by bats experienced a considerable increase, accounting for 15.1% of the total. The Program, which is implemented by State and Municipal authorities. Covers the 350,000 people who are attacked by animals, and vaccinates approximately 9,000,000 animals every annually year. Epidemiological control is considered to be of basic importance, so that indicators for the definition of the areas of risk have been developed.


Revista Panamericana De Salud Publica-pan American Journal of Public Health | 2002

Métodos de medición de las desigualdades de salud

Maria Cristina Schneider; Carlos Castillo-Salgado; Jorge Bacallao; Enrique Loyola; Oscar J Mujica; Manuel Vidaurre; Anne Roca

RESUMEN La medicion de las desigualdades en el campo de la salud es una condicion indispensable para avanzar en la mejoria de la situacion de salud de la Region, donde el analisis de los valores medios ha dejado de ser suficiente. Este tipo de analisis es una herramienta fundamental para la accion en busca de una mayor equidad en salud. Existen diferentes metodos de medicion y niveles de complejidad cuya eleccion depende del objetivo del estudio. Este articulo tiene como objetivo familiarizar a los profesionales de la salud y a las instancias decisorias con los aspectos metodologicos de la medicion y el analisis simple de las desigualdades en el campo de la salud, utilizando datos basicos registrados con regularidad y agregados por unidades geopoliticas. Se presenta la forma de calcular los siguientes indicadores y se comentan sus ventajas y desventajas: la razon y la diferencia de tasas, el indice de efecto, el riesgo atribuible poblacional, el indice de disimilitud, el indice de desigualdad de la pendiente y el indice relativo de desigualdad, el coeficiente de Gini y el indice de concentracion. Los metodos presentados son aplicables a la medicion de las desigualdades de diferentes tipos y a distintos niveles de analisis.Measuring health inequalities is indispensable for progress in improving the health situation in the Region of the Americas, where the analysis of average values is no longer sufficient. Analyzing health inequalities is a fundamental tool for action that seeks greater equity in health. There are various measurement methods, with differing levels of complexity, and choosing one rather than another depends on the objective of the study. The purpose of this article is to familiarize health professionals and decision-making institutions with methodological aspects of the measurement and simple analysis of health inequalities, utilizing basic data that are regularly reported by geopolitical unit. The calculation method and the advantages and disadvantages of the following indicators are presented: the rate ratio and the rate difference, the effect index, the population attributable risk, the index of dissimilarity, the slope index of inequality and the relative index of inequality, the Gini coefficient, and the concentration index. The methods presented are applicable to measuring various types of inequalities and at different levels of analysis.


Cadernos De Saude Publica | 2001

Common vampire bat attacks on humans in a village of the Amazon region of Brazil

Maria Cristina Schneider; Joan Aron; Carlos Santos-Burgoa; Wilson Uieda; Silvia Ruiz-Velazco

Many people in Amazonian communities have reported bat bites in the last decade. Bites by vampire bats can potentially transmit rabies to humans. The objective of this study was to analyze factors associated with bat biting in one of these communities. A cross-sectional survey was conducted in a village of gold miners in the Amazonian region of Brazil (160 inhabitants). Bats were captured near peoples houses and sent to a lab. Of 129 people interviewed, 41% had been attacked by a bat at least once, with 92% of the bites located on the lower limbs. A logistic regression found that adults were bitten around four times more often than children (OR = 3.75, CI 95%: 1.46-9.62, p = 0.036). Males were bitten more frequently than females (OR = 2.08, CI 95%: 0.90-4.76, p = 0.067). Nine Desmodus rotundus and three frugivorous bats were captured and tested negative for rabies. The study suggests that, in an area of gold miners, common vampire bats are more likely to attack adults and males. The control strategy for human rabies developed in this region should therefore place special emphasis on adult males. There should also be more research on how the search for gold in the Amazonian region places people and the environment at risk.


Revista Panamericana De Salud Publica-pan American Journal of Public Health | 2002

Overview of social inequalities in health in the Region of the Americas, using various methodological approaches

George Alleyne; Carlos Castillo-Salgado; Maria Cristina Schneider; Enrique Loyola; Manuel Vidaurre

Over the past decade, according to several important indicators, health conditions have improved in the Region of the Americas. However, inequalities persist among the countries of the Region. This article has two primary objectives: 1) to provide some unbiased evidence on health inequalities among countries of the Region of the Americas and 2) to illustrate the application of some of the more frequently used methods for measuring inequalities, including effect measurements, population attributable risk, the slope index of inequality, the relative index of inequality, and the concentration index. Analyses have shown that there are great health disparities in the Region of the Americas. For example, residents of the poorest countries of the Region live nearly 10 years less, on average, than do residents of the richest countries. If the other countries of the Americas had the same incidence of tuberculosis as does the subregion of North America (Bermuda, Canada, and the United States of America), there would be 76% fewer cases of this disease in the Region. In the Americas, nearly 35% of deaths of infants under 1 year old are concentrated in the 20% of live births that occur in the group with the lowest income. As for maternal mortality in the Americas, fewer than 2% of maternal deaths occur in association with the 20% of live births in the group with the highest income. The analyses of health inequalities based on the use of various methods highlight the existence of important disparities among subregions and countries of the Americas that are not readily seen when using only the more-traditional methods for analyzing mortality and morbidity. There is also a need to incorporate the concepts of distribution and socioeconomic dimensions of health when interpreting a given situation. Using this approach will allow decisionmakers to target areas and populations that are in less-favorable conditions. A considerable body of aggregate data at the Regional and country levels from routine information systems is already available--especially on morbidity, mortality, and other health-related factors--that can be used on a regular basis to analyze health inequalities. These kinds of analyses may be regarded as a first step toward the identification of health inequities.


International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2012

Leptospirosis Outbreaks in Nicaragua: Identifying Critical Areas and Exploring Drivers for Evidence-Based Planning

Maria Cristina Schneider; Patricia Nájera; Sylvain Aldighieri; Jorge Bacallao; Aida Soto; Wilmer Marquiño; Lesbia Altamirano; Carlos Sáenz; Jesus Marin; Eduardo Jiménez; Matthew Moynihan; Marcos A. Espinal

Leptospirosis is an epidemic-prone zoonotic disease that occurs worldwide. In Central America, leptospirosis outbreaks have been reported in almost all countries; Nicaragua in particular has faced several outbreaks. The objective of this study was to stratify the risk and identify “critical areas” for leptospirosis outbreaks in Nicaragua, and to perform an exploratory analysis of potential “drivers”. This ecological study includes the entire country (153 municipalities). Cases from 2004 to 2010 were obtained from the country’s health information system, demographic and socioeconomic variables from its Census, and environmental data from external sources. Criteria for risk stratification of leptospirosis were defined. Nicaragua reported 1,980 cases of leptospirosis during this period, with the highest percentage of cases (26.36%) in León, followed by Chinandega (15.35%). Among the 153 municipalities, 48 were considered critical areas, 85 were endemic and 20 silent. Using spatial and statistical analysis, the variable presenting the most evident pattern of association with critical areas defined by top quintile of incidence rate is the percentage of municipal surface occupied by the soil combination of cambisol (over pyroclastic and lava bedrock) and andosol (over a volcanic ashes foundation). Precipitation and percentage of rural population are also associated with critical areas. This methodology and findings could be used for Nicaragua’s Leptospirosis Intersectoral Plan, and to identify possible risk areas in other countries with similar drivers.


Revista Panamericana De Salud Publica-pan American Journal of Public Health | 2002

Life expectancy at birth and mortality in Brazil, 1999: exploratory analysis of regional differences

Elisabeth Carmen Duarte; Maria Cristina Schneider; Rômulo Paes-Sousa; Jarbas Barbosa da Silva; Carlos Castillo-Salgado

OBJECTIVE To analyze the inequalities found using health indicators in the states and regions of Brazil, according to 1999 socioeconomic and demographic indicators. METHODS An exploratory ecological cross-sectional study was carried out. The units of analysis were Brazilian states (n = 27) and regions (n = 5). Descriptive measures of inequality were calculated. Pearsons correlation and also linear regression analysis were used to identify associations between health indicators and selected socio-economic and demographic indicators. The health indicators analyzed were: life expectancy at birth, infant mortality rate, mortality rate for children < 5 years due to acute diarrheal diseases and to acute respiratory infections, and deaths due to homicides and traffic accidents. RESULTS Important gains were seen in life expectancy at birth over the 1991-1999 period, especially for males. There was a trend towards larger gains in states that had had lower life expectancy at birth in 1991, which produced greater homogeneity across Brazil in this indicator in recent years. The infant mortality rate decreased by 28% between 1991 and 1999. However, this indicator still varies widely among the regions--from 52.5 per 1,000 live births in the northeast to 17.1 per 1,000 in the south--and among states--from 64.0 per 1,000 in Alagoas to 15.1 per 1,000 in Rio Grande do Sul. With respect to children < 5 years, the mortality rate due to acute diarrheal diseases was equal to or higher than the national median (4.1 per 10,000) in all the north-eastern states, and the mortality rate due to acute respiratory infections was equal to or higher than the national median (10.8 per 10,000) in all the southern, southeastern, and central-western states. The mortality rates (standardized by sex and age) due to traffic accidents and to homicides in 1999 were 17.7 and 26.0 per 100,000 inhabitants, respectively. Extreme values were found in some states for mortality due to homicide (57.8 per 100,000 in Pernambuco) and traffic accidents (54.5 per 100,000 in Roraima). The mortality rate due to homicide was strongly associated with urbanization (P = 0.001). Higher mortality rates due to traffic accidents were associated with lower poverty levels (beta = -0.93; P < 0.001), lower literacy rates (beta = -1.16; P = 0.005), and larger population growth over the past decade (beta = 3.10; P = 0.016). CONCLUSIONS The pattern of health inequality in Brazil indicates a polarization among regions and states as well as a juxtaposition of diseases associated with under-development and diseases linked to development, suggesting the need for a health system that is committed to addressing these issues.


International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2013

Leptospirosis: A Silent Epidemic Disease

Maria Cristina Schneider; Michel Jancloes; Daniel Forsin Buss; Sylvain Aldighieri; Eric Bertherat; Patricia Najera; Deise I. Galan; Kara N. Durski; Marcos A. Espinal

This special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health is dedicated to leptospirosis, an endemic zoonotic disease that is a cause of many acute undifferentiated fevers, especially in tropical countries. While it can be debated whether leptospirosis is an emerging disease, it is evident that it is becoming an emerging public health problem. It is recognized as a disease of epidemic potential that has a significant health impact in many parts of the world.

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Carlos Castillo-Salgado

Pan American Health Organization

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Jorge Bacallao

University of Pennsylvania

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Enrique Loyola

Pan American Health Organization

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Sylvain Aldighieri

Pan American Health Organization

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Manuel Vidaurre

Pan American Health Organization

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Oscar J Mujica

Pan American Health Organization

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Patricia Nájera

Pan American Health Organization

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Luis Fernando Leanes

Pan American Health Organization

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Marcos A. Espinal

Pan American Health Organization

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