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Showing posts with label Rabies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rabies. Show all posts

Rabies Claims 100th Fatality in Bali

Jakarta Globe, October 15, 2010

Bali, Indonesia. A rabies outbreak on Indonesia’s resort island of Bali has now killed 100 people.

A street dog near Kuta Beach in Bali. The death of a
man in Bali overnight Thursday has taken the death toll
from the rabies outbreak on the resort island to 100.
(EPA Photo)
Ken Wirasandhi, a doctor monitoring the epidemic, said Friday that a 40-year-old villager died overnight after being hospitalized with rabies symptoms.

Bali, an island of 3 million people and one of Asia’s top tourist destinations, has been grappling with the outbreak for nearly two years.

Several countries have issued advisories, telling travelers they should get shots and stay clear of dogs roaming the white-sand beaches.

In a widely criticized move, local officials responded by killing 200,000 stray dogs, saying they couldn’t afford to vaccinate the animals against rabies. That has changed in recent weeks with the help of international funds.

Associated Press

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Ministries fighting Bali’s rabies epidemic

Dina Indrasafitri, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Sat, 08/14/2010 10:26 AM

The government is scrambling to counter the canine rabies epidemic that has swept Bali, amid 75 deaths and international warnings against travel to Indonesia’s famed tourism gem.

“We are targeting Bali to be rabies-free by 2012,” Health Ministry official Rita Kusriastuti said Friday in Jakarta.

The preferred method to reach that goal is by vaccinating the dogs, as opposed to killing them, said Rita, who is also the ministry’s director for zoonotic disease control.

“The population of dogs in Bali is 500,000 and 380,000 of them have been vaccinated. The Health Ministry, the Agriculture Ministry’s Husbandry Directorate General and relevant agencies in Bali will strive to vaccinate all dogs,” Rita said.

She added that there would be a new regulation to ensure that dogs cannot wander around freely in public.

Regulations for dogs in Indonesia are under the authority of the Agriculture Ministry’s veterinary division.

Seventy-five people are suspected to have died from rabies in Bali since November 2008, 35 of whom tested positively for the disease in post-mortem examinations.

An average of 125 people die from rabies each year in Indonesia, which is less than the 200-300 fatalities recorded in the Philippines, according to the Health Ministry.

Indonesia’s most recent rabies death was recorded last month, when a Buleleng resident died at Singaraja Regional Hospital.

The US and Australia have issued rabies-related travel advisories for their citizens who plan to visit Indonesia.

Rita said the Health Ministry has set up rabies centers to stop the spread of the disease.

“Officers at the centers should always be prepared with VAR, no matter how much is needed. We are doing this for Bali’s sake,” she said, referring to the anti-rabies vaccine.

The central government currently has 2,000 VAR doses, which are in high demand, Rita said.

The World Health Organization (WHO) provided the Bali administration with 250,000 doses of canine VAR last month.

Rabies has spread to 24 of the indonesia’s 33 provinces, according to ministry reports, which also stated Jakarta, Yogyakarta and West Nusa Tenggara were three of the country’s nine rabies-free provinces.

Rabies forced the declaration of an “extraordinary situation” (KLB) in Nias in February, where the disease has killed 23 people as of July, according to reports.

An extraordinary situation was also previously declared in Riau Islands in April.

Rita said that the immediate creation of the long-delayed Commission on Zoonotic Diseases would be “very helpful” in tackling the outbreaks.

Coordination between the Agriculture and Health Ministries at the central level has been conducted properly, she said, adding that the commission was needed to ensure smooth operation at the regional level.

Coordinating Public Welfare Ministry’s representative Emil Agustiono said that the ministries would “monitor the situation” regarding the diseases while ministerial talks on the commission’s establishment proceeds.

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Tourist Paradise Bali Acts to End Rabies Epidemic

Jakarta Globe, August 06, 2010

A stray dog wanders near by a temple compound in Jimbaran village in Bali on Friday. The Indonesian government is to vaccinate all dogs on the resort island to combat a raging rabies epidemic that has left 76 people dead over two years. (AFP Photo/Sonny Tumbelaka)  
      

Bali. The Indonesian government is to vaccinate all dogs on the holiday island of Bali to combat a raging rabies epidemic that has left 76 people dead over two years, an official said on Friday.

Around 34,000 people have been bitten by dogs on the island, which is popular with western tourists, in the first seven months of this year alone, authorities said.

“We aim to vaccinate all dogs in Bali by the end of this year to curb the spread of rabies. We’ll start to mass vaccinate the dogs in late September,” Bali animal husbandry agency chief Putu Sumantra said.

“There are still hundreds of thousand of dogs that have not been vaccinated. About 200 teams will be deployed to work in 700 villages,” he said.

Unlike the rest of mainly Muslim Indonesia, where people do not generally keep dogs, Bali is a predominantly Hindu island and dogs are common either as pets or strays.

Sumantra said that since 2008, about 300,000 dogs had been vaccinated. Tens of thousands of stray dogs had also been culled.

Bali health agency head Nyoman Sutedja said there were 34,000 cases of people being bitten by dogs in Bali this year compared to 28,000 dog bites in the whole of 2009.

“The rising cases of bites have made us worry. We need more anti-rabies vaccines for people here,” Sutedja said.

The latest victim of rabies, a 43-year old Balinese woman, died on Tuesday.

Australia and the US have issued travel warnings to tourists about the prevalance of the disease. 

Agence France-Presse

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