Browsing Research Articles [LISBE] by Author "Duamor, Christian"
Now showing items 1-4 of 4
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Development, feasibility and potential effectiveness of community-based continuous mass dog vaccination delivery strategies: lessons for optimization and replication
Duamor, Christian; Hampson, Katie; Lankester, Felix; Lugelo, Ahmed; Mpolya, Emmanuel; Kreppel, Katharina; Cleaveland, Sarah; Wyke, Sally (bioRxiv, 2022-03-13)Objectives Dog vaccination can eliminate rabies, but annual delivery strategies do not sustain vaccination coverage between campaigns. We describe the development of a community-based continuous mass dog vaccination (CBC-MDV) ... -
Integrating a community-based continuous mass dog vaccination delivery strategy into the veterinary system of Tanzania: A process evaluation using normalization process theory
Duamor, Christian; Hampson, Katie; Lankester, Felix; Lugelo, Ahmed; Changalucha, Joel; Lushasi, Kennedy; Czupryna, Anna; Mpolya, Emmanuel; Kreppel, Katharina; Cleaveland, Sarah; Wyke, Sally (Elsevier, 2023-06-03)Abstract: Sustained vaccination coverage of domestic dog populations can interrupt rabies transmission. How- ever, challenges remain including low dog owner participation, high operational costs associated with ... -
Participation in mass dog vaccination campaigns in Tanzania: Benefits of community engagement
Duamor, Christian; Lankester, Felix; Mpolya, Emmanuel; Ferguson, Elaine; Johnson, Paul; Wyke, Sally; Cleaveland, Sarah; Hampson, Katie; Kreppel, Katharina (Frontiers, 2022-10-13)Background: Canine rabies causes about 59,000 human deaths each year globally but the disease can be eliminated by sustaining sufficient dog vaccination coverage over several consecutive years. A challenge to achieving ... -
Use of lay vaccinators in animal vaccination programmes: A scoping review
Duamor, Christian; Hampson, Katie; Lankester, Felix; Sambo, Maganga; Kreppel, Katharina; Wyke, Sally; Cleaveland, Sarah (PLOS ONE, 2021-08-11)Background The human resource gap in veterinary sectors, particularly in low-income countries, imposes limitations on the delivery of animal healthcare in hard-to-reach populations. Lay animal health workers have been ...