Volunteer based approach to dog vaccination campaigns to eliminate human rabies: Lessons from Laikipia County, Kenya.
Adam W FergusonDishon M MuloiDedan K NgatiaWangechi KiongoDuncan M KimuyuPaul W WebalaMoses O OlumMathew MuturiSamuel M ThumbiRosie WoodroffeLucy MurugiEric M FèvreSuzan MurrayDino J MartinsPublished in: PLoS neglected tropical diseases (2020)
The evolution of the Laikipia Rabies Vaccination Campaign from a localized volunteer-effort to a large-scale program attempting to eliminate rabies at the landscape scale provides a unique opportunity to examine successes, failures, and challenges facing grassroots campaigns. Success, in the form of vaccinating more dogs across the study area, was relatively straightforward to achieve. However, lack of effective post-vaccination monitoring and education programs, limited funding, and working in diverse community types appeared to hinder achievement of 70% coverage levels. These results indicate that grassroots campaigns will inevitably be faced with a philosophical question regarding the value of local impacts versus their contributions to a larger effort to eliminate rabies at the regional, country, or global scale.