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Asiimwe Grace Karimu, F. Monje, D. Mugabi, H. Mulondo, C. Odong, H. Kazoora , T. Odoch, C. Ohuobunwo, K. Ssemogerere Introduction Methods Results Discussions Conclusion Recommendations Humans acquire rabies through bites by infected animals. Domestic dogs are most important source of infection to humans with more than 95% of human cases Although human rabies encephalitis remains untreatable the infection is preventable In 2010, Uganda reported 12,718 cases and 203 deaths from rabies with 82 (0.6%) cases from Mubende district. About 23% of land covered by forests General objective. To describe the burden of animal bites in humans and possible control measures Specific objectives Describe the burden of animal bite cases by person place and time Identify possible control measures in place Cross sectional study design Abstracted data from HMIS 031 registers at Mubende regional referral hospital (MRRH) and Veterinary department records. Conducted community survey from selected subcounties. Data analysed using Epi info version 5.3.1 software Veterinary Records Medical records In 2010 and 2011, 563 patients reported animal bites from 15 subcounties to MRRH with less than 1% first reporting to vet. Majority of the bites were due to dogs 540 (96%) Others; cats 12 (2.1%), jackals 5 (0.9%), goats 3 (0.5%), humans 3 (0.5%). 75.2 Incidence per10,000population 80 70 60 50 39.8 40 30 20 17.8 12.1 10 0 Sub county Incidence per 10,000 population 14.2 Patients aged 3 months to 84 years. Females 293 (52%) most affected. Only 541 (96.1%) patients treated with post exposure rabies vaccine Only 125 (23.1%) of the patients received the recommended 2-3 vaccine doses. March and August with high incidences 45 40 39 No. of animal bites reported. 40 35 32 30 25 2010 20 17 2011 14 15 10 5 0 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Months Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 28.3 30 Percentage of animal bites 25 20 15 Percentage cases 10 5 0 0–9 10 -19 20 - 29 30 - 39 40 - 49 Age group 50 – 59 60 - 69 70 - 79 80 - 89 Children (10 - 19yrs) more prone to animal bites. School going children most affected Stray dogs seen in communities visited Stray dog bites common. Weak departmental collaboration (Hospital, medical and veterinary dep'ts) Only 28% of the respondents had knowledge on rabies Animal bites and human rabies in Mubende primarily due to stray dogs. Post exposure prophylaxis is currently inadequate. Limited community knowledge on rabies Irregular control strategies District recruit Veterinary staff MAAIF provide vaccines to district for mass vaccination of pets Vet Sensitise communities/schools on rabies Training of VHT to report on zoonoses. Killing any stray dogs in the community Strengthening the bond between Health and Veterinary dep'ts (One Health) in the district Sensitisation of communities on rabies Kasambya subcounty Kiyuni subcounty Mubende district local government MRRH MUK-COVAB MAAIF AFENET USAID - RESPOND