Media

CARE: projects for lasting change

Communities Against Rabies Exposure - six projects are now underway

Ilocos Norte launch rabies education in the classroom

Ilocos Norte, in the Philippines, is the latest province to begin teaching rabies prevention to children in elementary school

Translating "policy into practice" for effective rabies control

Manila, January 22, 2014. Rabies experts from the public health and veterinary sectors of 7 Asian countries, from the Global Alliance for Rabies Control (GARC), and the regional offices of the WHO (World Health Organization) and OIE (World Organization for Animal Health) gathered for 3 days in Manila for the tenth annual meeting of the Asian Rabies Expert Bureau (AREB).

RITA 2013 - My experiences

Jessy Joseph, winner of the Student Support Award to attend RITA 2013 reports on her time at the conference

My rabies blog in Huffington Post

GARC Chief Executive, Deborah Briggs, shares the blog post that she wrote for the Huffington Post

World Rabies Day 2013: how it went and what you thought

A look back at World Rabies Day 2013, some of the events that took place and the extraordinary dedication and commitment of the global rabies community

GARC joins effort to control rabies in Indonesia

• Global Alliance for Rabies Control (GARC) signs Memorandum of Agreement with Indonesia’s government • GARC’s first project will be the island of Nias, rabies-free until the disease claimed 26 lives in 2010 • Nias will become one of GARC’s CARE (Communities Against Rabies Exposure) demonstration sites

Veterinary students from around the world unite on World Rabies Day

The International Veterinary Students Association organized events through 12 of their country chapters for World Rabies Day 2013

And the winner of the RITA support award is…

Announcing the winner of the support award for travel and expenses to the RITA conference in Toronto next month

World Rabies Day: Rabies elimination could save the world $124 billion annually

New study finds rabies costs the world economy £124 billion every year yet global elimination of canine rabies could be achieved for as little as $6-$8 billion.