Abstract
Based on reported cases of human rabies exposure to Colombia public health surveillance system between 2007 and 2016 we conducted a spatiotemporal analysis to identify epidemiological scenarios of human rabies exposure by dog, cat, bat or farm animal (n= 666,411 cases). Spatiotemporal analysis, incidence rate, cluster and outlier analysis were conducted for all Colombian cities (n= 1122). The incidence rate of human rabies exposure by dogs and cats showed an increasing trend while aggression by bats and farm animals fluctuated throughout the analyzed period. Human rabies transmitted by cat and bat occurred in Andean and Orinoquia region, where the larger scenario was observed. There, urban scenario showed high risk to human rabies exposure by cat and dog in cities characterized for having the highest human population density and greater economic development. In contrary, rural area where was observed high risk of human rabies exposure by farm animals in workers from agroforestry area (42.7%). exposed to rabies by contact of mucosa or injured skin with saliva infected with rabies virus (74.5%) composed rural scenario. In Inequality scenario, exposure by farm animals showed some outlier cities with high risk principally in Pacific region, where was observed the lowest incidence rates to human rabies exposure in all years studied and the highest poverty rates in Colombia. There, afro-descendant (55%) and indigenous (8.2%) people were mostly affected. High risk of exposure by bat bite was observed in indigenous (98.5%) located in cities of Amazon region with dispersed population (Amazonian scenario). Analysis presented here can encourage surveillance, care and prevention programs to focus both on ethnic, dispersed populations and areas with rabies viral circulation, since each scenario requires different approach strategies.
Author Summary Worldwide, rabies is transmitted by saliva contact contaminated with the rabies virus through a bite, scratching or licking of bat, dog, cat and other mammals. If disease is not treated in time is going to cause death. In Colombia, 14 deaths have been reported due to Classical Rabies Virus (RABV) in the last 10 years, but no spatial analysis has been carried out to determine different geographical risk factors. In this study, we analyzed people who were exposed to RAVB or died between 2007 and 2016, showing a relationship between age group, sex, occupation, ethnicity and illness. Considering these variables were possible to identify four different epidemiological scenarios where high migratory effect of the population takes the animals to areas with high population densities and also detect municipalities with very poor and vulnerable populations, located far from the health centers increasing the risk to die by rabies virus. Another contribution is the location of human rabies exposure in distinctly agricultural or indigenous areas, where exposure is clearly high and worrying.
Footnotes
↵* E-mail: maroarca01{at}yahoo.com
* Insular region was excluded because no municipalities clustering or outlier were observed
** Population mean determined by municipalities and corregimientos of the census projection in Colombia during 2007-2016.