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Charles E. Rupprecht

Researcher at Wistar Institute

Publications -  484
Citations -  29552

Charles E. Rupprecht is an academic researcher from Wistar Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rabies & Rabies virus. The author has an hindex of 86, co-authored 475 publications receiving 27058 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles E. Rupprecht include United States Department of Health and Human Services & Global Alliance for Rabies Control.

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Disappearance Rates of a Placebo Bait for the Small Indian Mongoose Across Different Habitats on St. Kitts

TL;DR: It is found that mongooses readily remove bait blocks, along with non-native mammals and land crabs in littoral habitats and in the dry forest habitat compared to the other habitats, which suggests that the bait blocks used in this study may be suitable for use as an external bait matrix for ORV baits.

Compendium of Animal Rabies Prevention and Control, 2011* National Association of State Public Health Veterinarians, Inc. (NASPHV)

TL;DR: The recommendations in this compendium serve as a basis for animal rabies-prevention and -control programs throughout the United States and facilitate standardization of procedures among jurisdictions, thereby contributing to an effective national rabies -control program.
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A One Medicine Mission for an Effective Rabies Therapy

TL;DR: The case for a One Medicine approach to accelerate development of an effective therapy for rabies through the veterinary care and investigational treatment of naturally infected dogs in appropriate circumstances is examined and the Canine Rabies Treatment Initiative is introduced.
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The Rabies Concert: Rising towards the Last Waltz?

TL;DR: A brief intermission between the opening piece of our Special Issue "Lyssaviruses and Rabies: Prevention, Control and Elimination" and this closing act of commentary can be found in this paper.
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Rabies vaccine baits, Pennsylvania.

TL;DR: Oral rabies vaccine programs control rabies in terrestrial reservoir species by distributing vaccine in baits by inserting a rabies virus glycoprotein gene inserted into the thymidine kinase gene of an attenuated strain of the Copenhagen vaccinia virus.