Rabies is a devastating, lethal zoonotic disease transmitted from bites from infected animals, mostly dogs. In Asia and Africa, rabies is estimated to kill more than 59,000 people each year, with the highest number of deaths, 20,000, occurring in India. In India, human rabies was made notifiable only in September 2021, so the on-the-ground reality of this disease, including the disproportionate burden of social inequality it inflicts on disadvantaged populations, is still poorly known.
The current global plan to eliminate dog-mediated human rabies grounds on the One Health approach, which integrates human, animal, and environmental health. With rabies, this strategy involves mass dog vaccination, the vaccination of bitten people, and close community engagement. While these measures are highly effective, rabies continues to kill thousands of people for reasons that are also cultural and religious. They determine how people take care of their health and that of their dogs, and influence local perspectives about One Health.
In two selected rural areas of Gujarat and Maharashtra, in Western India, this study used contact tracing and ethnography to investigate the impact of the cultural and religious background of individuals and communities on the prevention and management of dog and human rabies. In Gujarat, where the Hindu local goddess Hadkai Mata is venerated in case of dog bites, this project investigated the impact this may have on people’s health-seeking behaviours and dog keeping practices. The ultimate aim was to provide policymakers with the evidence they can use to inform the design of appropriate One Health interventions.
Results indicate that strong and specific understandings of rabies exist at the local level, and they deeply influence rabies management, mainly by delaying (and, occasionally, even excluding) life-saving human vaccination, and by rejecting dog vaccination. This project highlights the importance of understanding and addressing, together with local communities, different culturally- and religiously- mediated ways in which humans relate to animals, and of looking for points of convergence and mutual understanding, upon which context-tailored, linguistically accurate, locally acceptable, feasible and effective strategies can be designed.