Japanese Encephalitis: Strategies for Prevention and Control in India

Japanese Encephalitis (JE) is an important re-emerging vector-borne zoonotic disease of the 21st century which is the most important cause of morbidity and mortality due to pediatric viral encephalitis in Asian populations. India and China together report 95% of the disease burden where it is also a...

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Main Authors: Ruchir Rustagi, Saurav Basu, Suneela Garg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2019-01-01
Series:Indian Journal of Medical Specialities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/INJMS.INJMS_22_18
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author Ruchir Rustagi
Saurav Basu
Suneela Garg
author_facet Ruchir Rustagi
Saurav Basu
Suneela Garg
author_sort Ruchir Rustagi
collection DOAJ
description Japanese Encephalitis (JE) is an important re-emerging vector-borne zoonotic disease of the 21st century which is the most important cause of morbidity and mortality due to pediatric viral encephalitis in Asian populations. India and China together report 95% of the disease burden where it is also an important cause of acute encephalitis syndrome. JE is a neglected tropical disease which disproportionately afflicts poor and economically disadvantaged populations in rural regions of low and middle-income countries which often lack well-equipped tertiary care centers for the management of JE cases presenting with central nervous system manifestations and related complications. JE has large animal reservoirs among pigs and water birds which renders JE elimination difficult. Hence, current strategy for JE prevention and control pursues a combined approach inclusive of expansion of JE vaccination coverage in endemic regions, vector control, and surveillance. Unfortunately, the lack of public health infrastructure, economic resources, and lack of political commitment has resulted in most endemic countries in the developing world failing to take adequate steps for achieving these recommended measures for JE control, especially with regard to developing surveillance capacities and reference laboratories for the diagnosis of JE. Moreover, the threat of JE has increased in recent years due to factors such as climate change and lack of economic development in several endemic zones even as the disease has begun affecting adult populations. Evidence from surveillance data in some countries also suggests that increase in vaccination coverage for JE does not necessarily correlate with decline in JE disease burden. Ultimately, JE is likely to persist as a major public health problem in the developing world and impede their economic development unless it receives adequate attention from the global health community.
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spelling doaj-art-3a6d4bce56e04a1689c9b1d3492015fb2025-08-25T08:30:49ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsIndian Journal of Medical Specialities0976-28840976-28922019-01-01101121710.4103/INJMS.INJMS_22_18Japanese Encephalitis: Strategies for Prevention and Control in IndiaRuchir RustagiSaurav BasuSuneela GargJapanese Encephalitis (JE) is an important re-emerging vector-borne zoonotic disease of the 21st century which is the most important cause of morbidity and mortality due to pediatric viral encephalitis in Asian populations. India and China together report 95% of the disease burden where it is also an important cause of acute encephalitis syndrome. JE is a neglected tropical disease which disproportionately afflicts poor and economically disadvantaged populations in rural regions of low and middle-income countries which often lack well-equipped tertiary care centers for the management of JE cases presenting with central nervous system manifestations and related complications. JE has large animal reservoirs among pigs and water birds which renders JE elimination difficult. Hence, current strategy for JE prevention and control pursues a combined approach inclusive of expansion of JE vaccination coverage in endemic regions, vector control, and surveillance. Unfortunately, the lack of public health infrastructure, economic resources, and lack of political commitment has resulted in most endemic countries in the developing world failing to take adequate steps for achieving these recommended measures for JE control, especially with regard to developing surveillance capacities and reference laboratories for the diagnosis of JE. Moreover, the threat of JE has increased in recent years due to factors such as climate change and lack of economic development in several endemic zones even as the disease has begun affecting adult populations. Evidence from surveillance data in some countries also suggests that increase in vaccination coverage for JE does not necessarily correlate with decline in JE disease burden. Ultimately, JE is likely to persist as a major public health problem in the developing world and impede their economic development unless it receives adequate attention from the global health community.https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/INJMS.INJMS_22_18controlencephalitisindiaprevention
spellingShingle Ruchir Rustagi
Saurav Basu
Suneela Garg
Japanese Encephalitis: Strategies for Prevention and Control in India
Indian Journal of Medical Specialities
control
encephalitis
india
prevention
title Japanese Encephalitis: Strategies for Prevention and Control in India
title_full Japanese Encephalitis: Strategies for Prevention and Control in India
title_fullStr Japanese Encephalitis: Strategies for Prevention and Control in India
title_full_unstemmed Japanese Encephalitis: Strategies for Prevention and Control in India
title_short Japanese Encephalitis: Strategies for Prevention and Control in India
title_sort japanese encephalitis strategies for prevention and control in india
topic control
encephalitis
india
prevention
url https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/INJMS.INJMS_22_18
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AT suneelagarg japaneseencephalitisstrategiesforpreventionandcontrolinindia