WHO includes Himachal Pradesh doctor’s low-cost treatment protocol

Shimla | Sunday | 22nd April, 2018

Summary:

“The low-dose protocol, which was backed by existing literature, increased the availability of RIG for dog-bite patients in the hospital. With support from hospital authorities and the state health high-ups, we have now been giving vaccine and RIG free of cost to all patients,” he said. The RIG was calculated on body weight (of patient)) basis, which was a costly option.The WHO guidelines 2018, however, no longer recommend intra-muscular administration of RIG at a distance from the wound. SHIMLA: The revised guidelines of World Health Organisation ( WHO ) on rabies prophylaxis have incorporated a ‘low-cost treatment protocol’ proposed by a government doctor from Himachal Pradesh for dog-bite patients.Released on Friday, WHO’s technical report series (1012) has referenced two papers on practical research by field epidemiologist Dr Omesh Kumar Bharti on “dose and cost sparing” use of rabies immunoglobulins (RIG) in dog-bite patients. The 195-page technical report series for rabies prevention across the globe recommends that apart from anti-rabies vaccination, the infiltration of RIG in wound only is effective, a protocol established by Dr Bharti at Deen Dayal Upadhayaya Hospital.As per earlier WHO guidelines in 2010, now replaced by 2018 guidelines, any dog/monkey-bite patient was administered vaccine intradermally and along with this, the RIG was injected in wound and remaining in muscle, intramuscularly (IM)..