Anthropologist Dr. Phillip Winn, investigates rabies in Maluku, Indonesia - an area which was rabies-free until 2003
The MDV campaign of Bangladesh during 2011-12 represented a paradigm shift from control to elimination of rabies as the national strategy of Bangladesh.
A multi-institutional research study headed by Meagan C. Fitzpatrick at the Yale School for Public Health has shown for the first time that repeated annual dog vaccination campaigns in rural Africa are cost-effective.
Here we aim to list recent research papers most relevant to GARC’s mission.
Following on from the establishment of rabies diagnostic facilities for the first time, the government of Gabon, in collaboration with FAO and others, hosted a national workshop entitled “Rabies prevention and control: How to improve collaboration between key stakeholders?”.
Daktari founder Dr. Jesús Muro summarizes their project to bring veterinary support to rural communities living in and around wildlife protected areas
On February 27th, rabies researchers were amongst a group from Boyd Orr Centre for Population and Ecosystem Health at the University of Glasgow, accepting a Queen's Anniversary Prize for Higher and Further Education at Buckingham Palace in London
A summary of the rabies outbreak on Bali and how mass dog vaccination has led to a dramatic fall in human cases
Nigerian researchers have shown that local butchers may be routinely exposed to rabies from apparently healthy, indigenous dogs when preparing the animals for human consumption. Advisory: This article contains a graphic image of dog slaughtering
A recent paper in Infectious Diseases of Poverty highlights a disconnect between research being undertaken and the information needed to actively reduce the impact of the disease