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Reappearance of rabies in Greece

World Congress on Infectious Diseases

Triantafyllou Argyro

Posters-Accepted Abstracts: J Infect Dis Ther

DOI: 10.4172/2332-0877.S1.003

Abstract

In Greece no case of rabies in animals has been recorded since 1987 and the last case of infection to humans has been
recorded in 1970. Since 2012, 48 cases of rabies cases have been recorded in animals (40 foxes and 5 dogs) and more than
376 cases of people have been recorded who have been in contact with animals infected or possibly infected by rabies virus.
In Europe 6000 animals die every year from rabies and 8-10 people per year, all in countries of the former Soviet Union.
In Balkans because of the political and social disorders in recent years and the failure of the public health system to respond
to new circumstances, there is a reemergence of rabies in foxes as well as in domestic cats, cattle and sheep. In Albania and
Fyrom, the last decade there have been no cases in humans, while in Turkey 1-2 incidents are reported ,because they don’t
take the appropriate treatment.(Table 1). In Greece, a red fox in the area of Kozani was found positive for rabies virus ,on 19
October 2012. Since then, there have been 48 cases, mainly in north Greece.(table 2). The reappearance of the disease can
be attributed to various causes, such as the presence of rabies in our neighboring countries, the movement of wild animals
from these countries to Greece and the collapse of former Yugoslavia that resulted in ineffective control during and after the
war. The lack of action by the State is another factor. From 2004, scientists pointed out the presence of rabies in neighboring
countries and had proposed measures such as the airdrops of vaccines in baits, but had not been heard from the state, because
it was considered unnecessary and costly. Airdrops of vaccines began the following year, in October of 2013, while they should
have begun six months before, in March, which is the time of reproduction of foxes and likely to transmit rabies among them,
so there was a delay of six months. This was done because the competition for the acquisition of the vaccines lasted several
months, as there was a large participation of companies, but some did not meet the appropriate criteria. Necessary measures to
limit the disease are: Continuous surveillance, reduction and vaccination of stray animals, vaccination of wild animals, passive
and active surveillance, informing the public, collaboration between the authorities, medical doctors, veterinarians, Ministry
of Rural Development and Food, Ministry of Health, KEELPNO, collaboration of Greece with neighboring countries.

Biography

Triantafyllou Argyro is a biopathologist at private hospital Hygeia since 2011 in the Hematology Department, 2years from 2008 till 2010 working in Blood Donation
Lab in General Hospital Janneio, student in Master “International Medicine-Health Crisis Management”

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