PRESENTATIONS
DAY 1 : THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2015 |
|||
SESSION 1 : WELCOME AND SCENE SETTING |
P |
A |
|
1 |
KEYNOTE ADDRESS: DOG-MEDIATED HUMAN RABIES ELIMINATION IS FEASIBLE - (Bernard Vallat) |
||
SESSION 2 : PROOF OF CONCEPT FOR ELIMINATION |
P |
A |
|
1 |
|||
SOUTH AFRICA – KWAZULU-NATAL EXAMPLE - ( Kevin le Roux ) |
|||
2 |
TANZANIA - Emmanuel A. Mpolya |
||
3 |
PHILIPPINES - Raffy Deray |
||
SESSION 3 : REGIONAL APPROACH AND PROGRESS |
P |
A |
|
1 |
|||
PROGRESS IN EUROPE – Thomas Mueller (Friedrich Loeffler Institute) |
|||
2 |
PROGRESS IN THE AMERICAS - Ottorino Cosivi (PAHO) |
||
3 |
PROGRESS IN MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA - Mohammed Bengoumi (FAO) |
||
4 |
PROGRESS IN ASIA - Mary Joy Gordoncillo (OIE) |
||
5 |
PROGRESS IN AFRICA - Louis Nel (GARC) |
||
SESSION 4 : OPERATIONALISATION OF DOG-TRANSMITTED RABIES ELIMINATION THROUGH PREVENTION AT THE SOURCE |
P |
A |
|
1 |
|||
TACKLING MASS DOG VACCINATION – Be Nazir (Rabies in Asia Foundation) |
|||
2 |
DOG BITE PREVENTION FOR RABIES ELIMINATION – Daniel Stewart (South Africa ) |
||
3 |
ONE HEALTH : INTER SECTORIAL COLLABORATION – Eric Osoro (MoH Kenya) |
||
4 |
EDUCATION OF "AT RISK" COMMUNITIES – Deepa Balaram (GARC) |
||
DAY 2 : FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2015 |
|||
SESSION 5 : STRATEGIES TO CATALYSE ACTIONS |
P |
A |
|
1 |
|||
VACCINE BANKS AND QUALITY OF VACCINES – Alain Dehove (OIE) |
|||
2 |
IMPACT OF RABIES VACCINE BANK FROM THE RECIPIENT COUNTRY PERSPECTIVE: THE PHILIPPINES – Rubina Cresencio (Philippines) |
||
3 |
ACCESS TO VACCINES AND IMMUNOGLOBULINES – Bernadette ABELA-RIDDER (WHO) |
||
4 |
THE ROLE OF PRIVATE VETERINARIANS IN RABIES ELIMINATION – René Carlson (Word Veterinary Association) |
||
SESSION 6 : THE GLOBAL CAMPAIGN FOR RABIES ELIMINATION |
P |
A |
|
1 |
|||
THE HEALTH-COSTS OF RABIES PREVENTION – Katie Hampson (Glasgow University) |
|||
2 |
LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND MUNICIPALITIES : MOTIVATING COMMUNITIES – Eduardo Pacheco de Caldas (Mexico) |
||
3 |
CROSS BORDER COLLABORATION : THE INFLUENCE OF THE CHAMPION COUNTRY - Bavukile Kunene (Swaziland) |
||
4 |
AN EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION CAMPAIGN. SEVEN YEARS OF WORLD RABIES DAY. END RABIES CAMPAIGN – Deborah Briggs (Kansas State University) |
POSTERS
POSTERS |
|||
RABIES PROJECTS |
P |
A |
|
1 |
Communities against Rabies Exposure (CARE) Project |
||
2 |
|||
Rabies elimination efforts on Haiti (not available for printing) |
|||
3 |
Rabies elimination efforts on Zanzibar |
||
4 |
Prevention of sylvatic human rabies with massive rabies prophylaxis) |
||
5 |
The Stop Transboundary Animal Diseases and Zoonoses (STANDZ) Initiative on Rabies in South-East Asia |
||
6 |
Panamerican World Rabies Day Initiative: Photo Contest 2015 |
||
INNOVATIVE TOOLS |
P |
A |
|
7 |
|||
SARE: Stepwise Approach towards Rabies Elimination. A planning tool for countries |
|||
8 |
Oral vaccination of dogs against rabies as a supplementary tool to parenteral vaccination: a sustainable solution towards eradication of dog-mediated rabies |
||
9 |
Bioeconomic modelling of rabies spread. (USDA) (not available for printing) |
||
10 |
The Blueprint for Canine Rabies Prevention and Control |
||
11 |
Rabies educational platform and certificate courses |
||
12 |
Guidelines for Mass Dog Vaccination |
||
13 |
Challenges and achievements in animal rabies diagnosis in low-resource countries: the case of West and Central Africa |
||
INTER-SECTORAL COLLABORATION. ONE HEALTH APPROACH |
P |
A |
|
14 |
|||
The Partners for Rabies Prevention |
|||
15 |
World Veterinary and Medical Associations Collaboration on One Health |
||
16 |
ASEAN rabies elimination strategy |
||
17 |
Rabies – a threat to biodiversity |