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Hosein: 1,600 animals vaccinated against rabies - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

AGRICULTURE Minister Kazim Hosein has said approximately 1,600 livestock (cattle, sheep and goats) have been vaccinated to date against rabies.

He spoke during a rabies vaccination exercise at a farm in Sukhan Trace, Barrackpore on Thursday.

In the Senate on Tuesday, Hosein said steps were being taken to address an outbreak of rabies in the area.

He told reporters that since being appointed agriculture minister in a Cabinet reshuffle on March 16, this was his first day in the field.

Hosein was accompanied by ministers in the Agriculture Ministry Nigel De Freitas and Avinash Singh. De Freitas, formerly Senate vice-president, gave up this post after he was appointed a minister in the Cabinet reshuffle.

Hosein was pleased that before he assumed office, the ministry was already taking action on cases of rabies in Barrackpore. "They were already on the ball."

To date, he said 22 cows and two sheep have died.

"It is affecting most of the southern region right now."

Hosein added some rabies cases were reported in Penal as well. While no other reports have come from any other part of the country, Hosein said ministry personnel are checking in other areas.

He was encouraged by the response from farmers in Barrackpore to get their animals vaccinated.

"The vaccination process is very, very important."

Hosein said the ministry has set up a direct line of communication for them to report possible rabies cases and also has an ongoing public awareness campaign about rabies.

Common rabies symptoms in livestock are excess salivation, lack of co-ordination of the hind limbs, downer cow syndrome (animal falls and cannot get up), animals lying on their side and death.

Hosein also said he spoke on Tuesday with Health Minister Terrence Deyalsingh about an ongoing programme to vaccinate people against rabies.

Ministry veterinary officer Dr Jevan Siewsankar said, "Every single farmer that has had a suspect case has been sent to get the prophylactic vaccine. As of today, that would be 29-30."

Siewsankar attributed this outbreak of rabies to a surge in the bat population, and reminded the media that rabies is endemic in Trinidad and Tobago.

"We have had five outbreaks in the last 50 years. This is probably the sixth."

The frequency of vaccination depends on the type of vaccine used and the type of livestock it is used on.

Siewsankar said, "Cattle with the brand that we are using now get vaccinated every three years. Sheep and goats get vaccinated every year."

He said one reason why livestock contract rabies is because farmers use private vets instead of the ministry's services to vaccinate their animals.

"It seems as if these private vets have not been encouraging the farmers to go and get their animals vaccinated by the ministry. "Lot of the farmers had animals that were unvaccinated for years. We are encouraging all farmers to call us to make appointments to get their animals vaccinated."

Reiterating that rabies from infected livestock is spread through their saliva, Siewsankar said the risk of

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