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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Culling dogs in scenarios of imperfect control: realistic impact on the prevalence of canine visceral leishmaniasis.

Journal:
PLoS neglected tropical diseases
Year:
2013
Authors:
Costa, Danielle N C C et al.
Affiliation:
Program for Scientific Computing · Brazil
Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Visceral leishmaniasis is a serious disease that affects both dogs and humans, especially in some Latin American countries. This study looked at how culling, or putting down infected dogs, impacts the spread of the disease. Researchers created mathematical models to understand how the disease spreads and how effective culling can be. They found that while a long-term program targeting both sick and healthy dogs could help control the disease, randomly putting down healthy dogs that test positive could actually make things worse and upset the community. Overall, culling alone is not enough to control the disease in areas where it spreads quickly; careful planning and responsible actions are necessary for any control efforts to be successful.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Visceral leishmaniasis belongs to the list of neglected tropical diseases and is considered a public health problem worldwide. Spatial correlation between the occurrence of the disease in humans and high rates of canine infection suggests that in the presence of the vector, canine visceral leishmaniasis is the key factor for triggering transmission to humans. Despite the control strategies implemented, such as the sacrifice of infected dogs being put down, the incidence of American visceral leishmaniasis remains high in many Latin American countries. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Mathematical models were developed to describe the transmission dynamics of canine leishmaniasis and its control by culling. Using these models, imperfect control scenarios were implemented to verify the possible factors which alter the effectiveness of controlling this disease in practice. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: A long-term continuous program targeting both asymptomatic and symptomatic dogs should be effective in controlling canine leishmaniasis in areas of low to moderate transmission (R0 up to 1.4). However, the indiscriminate sacrifice of asymptomatic dogs with positive diagnosis may jeopardize the effectiveness of the control program, if tests with low specificity are used, increasing the chance of generating outrage in the population, and leading to lower adherence to the program. Therefore, culling must be planned accurately and implemented responsibly and never as a mechanical measure in large scale. In areas with higher transmission, culling alone is not an effective control strategy.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23951375/