Extension of Temporary Suspension of Dogs Entering the United States From Countries With a High Risk of Rabies
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Abstract
In order to protect the United States against the potential reintroduction of the dog-maintained rabies virus variant (DMRVV) into the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), announces an extension of the current temporary suspension of the importation into the United States of dogs from countries at high-risk for enzootic rabies (DMRVV high-risk countries). This suspension includes dogs that have been in any DMRVV high-risk countries during the previous six months.
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<title>Federal Register, Volume 88 Issue 130 (Monday, July 10, 2023)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 130 (Monday, July 10, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 43570-43581]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2023-14342]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Extension of Temporary Suspension of Dogs Entering the United
States From Countries With a High Risk of Rabies
AGENCY: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: In order to protect the United States against the potential
reintroduction of the dog-maintained rabies virus variant (DMRVV) into
the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC), within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS),
announces an extension of the current temporary suspension of the
importation into the United States of dogs from countries at high-risk
for enzootic rabies (DMRVV high-risk countries). This suspension
includes dogs that have been in any DMRVV high-risk countries during
the previous six months.
DATES: The extension of the temporary suspension of the importation of
dogs into the United States from DMRVV high-risk countries will be
implemented on August 1, 2023, when the current suspension expires, and
will remain in effect through July 31, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ashley C. Altenburger, J.D., Division
of Global Migration and Quarantine, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road NE, MS H16-4, Atlanta, GA 30329.
Telephone: 1-800-232-4636. For information regarding CDC regulations
for the importation of dogs: Dr. Emily Pieracci, D.V.M., Division of
Global Migration and Quarantine, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road NE, MS H16-4, Atlanta, GA 30329.
Telephone: 1-800-232-4636.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: CDC is extending, but not modifying, the
terms of the current temporary suspension of the importation into the
United States of dogs from countries at high-risk for enzootic rabies
(DMRVV high-risk countries), including dogs that have been in any DMRVV
high-risk countries during the previous six months. A suspension
remains necessary to protect the public's health against the
reintroduction of the dog-maintained rabies virus variant (DMRVV) into
the United States. There is a continued threat posed by dogs from DMRVV
high-risk countries which are unvaccinated or inadequately vaccinated
against rabies. This continued threat is due to various factors,
including: a high volume of dogs being imported into the United States
contemporaneous with insufficient veterinary controls in DMRVV high-
risk countries to prevent the export of inadequately vaccinated dogs,
inadequate global veterinary supply chains for vaccines and related
materials, and persistent workforce capacity shortages, particularly in
DMRVV high-risk countries that export dogs to the United States. CDC
anticipates that these factors are likely to continue over the course
of the next 12 months. Considering these factors, CDC has determined
that it is necessary to extend the temporary suspension through July
31, 2024, to ensure dogs imported into the United States do not pose a
public health threat of reintroducing DMRVV into the United States.\1\
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\1\ In consideration of both the anticipated needs for global
rabies vaccine campaigns to return to pre-pandemic levels and to
avoid disruption to importers' and the travel industry's operations,
CDC has determined that a one-year extension of the temporary
suspension is required to protect the public's health and is
therefore in the public's interest. In the absence of a further
extension of the temporary suspension or the adoption of an
alternate framework to mitigate the importation of dogs infected
with rabies, dog importation requirements would return to procedures
that proved inadequate to prevent the import of rabid dogs into the
United States.
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[[Page 43571]]
Additionally, CDC is publishing a proposed rule as a companion
document, published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register,
that outlines requirements regarding an importation system to reduce
fraud and improve the U.S. government's ability to verify U.S. entry
requirements and mitigate the introduction of dogs infected with
rabies. If adopted, this proposed rule would mitigate the need for
further extensions of the temporary suspension.
I. Background and Authority
Rabies is one of the deadliest zoonotic diseases and accounts for
an estimated 59,000 human deaths globally each year.\2\ This equates to
one human death every nine minutes.\3\ DMRVV is responsible for 98
percent of these deaths.\4\ The rabies virus can infect any mammal and,
once clinical signs appear, the disease is almost always fatal.\5\ In
September 2007, at the Inaugural World Rabies Day Symposium, CDC
declared the United States to be free of DMRVV.\6\ However, DMRVV is
still a serious public health threat in the more than 100 countries
where it remains enzootic. Preventing the entry of animals infected
with DMRVV into the United States is a public health priority.
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\2\ World Health Organization (2018). WHO Expert Consultation on
Rabies (WHO Technical Report Series 1012). Retrieved from <a href="https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/WHO-TRS-1012">https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/WHO-TRS-1012</a>.
\3\ Id.
\4\ Hampson K, Coudeville L, Lembo T, et al.; Global Alliance
for Rabies Control Partners for Rabies Prevention. Estimating the
global burden of endemic canine rabies. PLoS Negl Trop Dis
2015;9:e0003709. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003709">https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003709</a>.
\5\ Fooks, A.R., Banyard, A.C., Horton, D.L., Johnson, N.,
McElhinney, L.M., and Jackson, A.C. (2014) Current status of rabies
and prospects for elimination. Lancet, 384(9951), 1389-1399. doi:
10.1016/S0140-6736(13)62707-5.
\6\ Velasco-Villa, A., Mauldin, M., Shi, M., Escobar, L.,
Gallardo-Romero, N., Damon, I., Emerson, G. (2017) The history of
rabies in the Western Hemisphere. Antiviral Res, 146, 221-232.
doi:10.1016/j.antiviral.2017.03.013.
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Under section 361 of the Public Health Service Act (PHS Act) (42
U.S.C. 264), the Secretary of Health and Human Services may make and
enforce such regulations as in the Secretary's judgment are necessary
to prevent the introduction, transmission, or spread of communicable
diseases from foreign countries into the United States and from one
state or possession into any other state or possession.\7\ Such
regulations may provide for inspection, fumigation, disinfection,
sanitation, pest extermination, destruction of animals or articles
found to be sources of dangerous infection to human beings, and other
measures. Under section 362 of the PHS Act (42 U.S.C. 265), the
Secretary, and by delegation the Director of CDC (CDC Director),\8\ may
prohibit entries and imports from foreign countries into the United
States ``in whole or in part'' if there is a serious risk of
introducing communicable disease and when required in the interest of
public health.
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\7\ Although the statute assigns authority to the Surgeon
General, all statutory powers and functions of the Surgeon General
were transferred to the Secretary of HHS in 1966, 31 FR 8855, 80
Stat. 1610 (June 25, 1966), see also Public Law 96-88, 509(b),
October 17, 1979, 93 Stat. 695 (codified at 20 U.S.C. 3508(b)). The
Secretary has retained these authorities despite the reestablishment
of the Office of the Surgeon General in 1987.
\8\ See 42 CFR 71.51(e), 71.63.
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Under 42 CFR 71.51, all dogs admitted into the United States must
be accompanied by a valid rabies vaccination certificate,\9\ unless the
dogs' owners or importers submit satisfactory evidence that dogs under
six months of age have not been in a DMRVV high-risk country or dogs
older than six months have not been in a DMRVV high-risk country during
the six months prior to arrival.\10\ CDC maintains a publicly available
list of DMRVV high-risk countries \11\ and provides guidance for dog
entry requirements based on the dog's country of origin.
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\9\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2022). What is a
valid rabies vaccination certificate? Retrieved from <a href="https://www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/vaccine-certificate.html">https://www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/vaccine-certificate.html</a>.
\10\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2019). Guidance
Regarding Agency Interpretation of ``Rabies-Free'' as It Relates to
the Importation of Dogs Into the United States. Federal Register,
Vol. 84,724-730. Retrieved from <a href="https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/01/31/2019-00506/guidance-regarding-agency-interpretation-of-rabies-free-as-it-relates-to-the-importation-of-dogs">https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/01/31/2019-00506/guidance-regarding-agency-interpretation-of-rabies-free-as-it-relates-to-the-importation-of-dogs</a>.
\11\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2022). What is
a valid rabies vaccination certificate? Retrieved from <a href="https://www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/rabies-vaccine.html">https://www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/rabies-vaccine.html</a>.
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CDC subject matter experts review publicly available data and
conduct an annual assessment to determine which countries have high
risk of DMRVV.\12\ This assessment considers the following factors:
presence or prevalence of domestically acquired cases of DMRVV in
humans and animals; efforts towards control of DMRVV in dogs (such as
dog vaccination coverage, dog population management, and existence and
enforcement of legal codes to limit rabies transmission in dogs); and
the quality of rabies surveillance systems, rate of testing, and
laboratory capacity. If data are not available, the country is not
considered to have a robust rabies control program. If a country has
provided additional substantial data to support a DMRVV-free or DMRVV
low-risk status, CDC can review that information and reassess the
country's status.
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\12\ Henry RE, Blanton JD, Angelo KM, Pieracci EG, Stauffer K,
Jentes ES, Allen J, Glynn M, Brown CM, Friedman CR, Wallace R. A
country classification system to inform rabies prevention guidelines
and regulations. J Travel Med. 2022 Jul 14;29(4):taac046. doi:
10.1093/jtm/taac046. PMID: 35348741.
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Under 42 CFR 71.51(e), dogs may be subject to ``additional
requirements as may be deemed necessary'' or ``exclusion if coming from
areas which the [CDC] Director has determined to have high rates of
rabies.'' Based on the previously described criteria, CDC determined
that DMRVV high-risk countries constitute areas that have high rates of
DMRVV, and dogs imported from these countries are thus subject to
additional requirements and/or exclusion.\13\
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\13\ Id.
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Under 42 CFR 71.63, CDC may also temporarily suspend the entry of
animals, articles, or things from designated foreign countries and
places into the United States when it determines there exists in a
foreign country a communicable disease that threatens the public health
of the United States and the entry of imports from that country
increases the risk that the communicable disease may be introduced.
When such a suspension is issued, CDC designates the period of time or
conditions under which imports into the United States are suspended.
CDC likewise determined that DMRVV exists in countries designated as
DMRVV high-risk countries and that, if reintroduced into the United
States, DMRVV would threaten the public health of the United States.
Pursuant to these legal authorities and determinations made
thereunder, on June 16, 2021, CDC announced a temporary suspension of
the importation of dogs from DMRVV high-risk countries into the United
States to protect the public health against the reintroduction of DMRVV
into the United States (the temporary suspension).\14\ The temporary
suspension went into effect on July 14, 2021.
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\14\ Temporary Suspension of Dogs Entering the United States
from High-Risk Rabies Countries. Federal Register, 86 FR 32041, June
16, 2021.
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CDC found that the temporary suspension prohibiting the importation
of dogs from DMRVV high-risk countries for rabies was especially
necessary due to the diversion of public health resources to respond to
the COVID-19 pandemic. The limited
[[Page 43572]]
availability of public health resources due to the unprecedented global
response to the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in reduced capacity at the
Federal, state, and local levels to address the increased risk of the
reintroduction of DMRVV. Despite a decrease in international travel
volumes due to the global COVID-19 pandemic, CDC noted an increase in
importers circumventing dog import regulations--there was a 52 percent
increase in dogs ineligible for entry in 2020 as compared to 2018 and
2019. Additionally, four rabid dogs were imported into the United
States between 2015 and 2021. For these reasons, CDC implemented the
temporary suspension in July 2021. In addition, CDC implemented a CDC
Dog Import Permit \15\ during the temporary suspension to verify the
documentation of imported dogs before they are flown to the United
States.
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\15\ Approved under OMB Control Number 0920-1383 Importation
Regulations (42 CFR 71 Subpart F) (exp. 1/31/2026, or as revised).
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Since the temporary suspension first went into effect in July 2021,
CDC has modified the terms of the suspension to allow for more dog
imports as the public health situation has gradually improved and as
more public health resources have become available globally. On June 1,
2022, CDC announced a modified and extended temporary suspension,
effective June 10, 2022 through January 31, 2023.\16\ The extension and
modification of the temporary suspension permitted all categories of
importers to import dogs from DMRVV high-risk countries, while
requiring commercially imported dogs to enter the United States at a
port of entry with a CDC-approved animal care facility with a
Facilities Information and Resource Management System (FIRMS) code
issued by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).\17\ CDC also
expanded the list of the approved ports of entry to include 18 airports
\18\ with a CDC quarantine station for importers with a valid U.S.-
issued rabies vaccination certificate or a CDC Dog Import Permit. On
January 27, 2023, CDC announced an extension of the temporary
suspension through July 31, 2023, without modifications.\19\ The
extension took effect February 1, 2023, and continues to allow dogs
from DMRVV high-risk countries to enter the United States under one of
the options outlined in the June 10, 2022, extension.
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\16\ Id.
\17\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2023). CDC
Approved Animal Care Facilities. Retrieved from <a href="https://www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/approved-care-facilities.html">https://www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/approved-care-facilities.html</a>.
\18\ The 18 approved ports of entry are: Anchorage (ANC),
Atlanta (ATL), Boston (BOS), Chicago (ORD), Dallas (DFW), Detroit
(DTW), Honolulu (HNL), Houston (IAH), Los Angeles (LAX), Miami
(MIA), Minneapolis (MSP), New York (JFK), Newark (EWR), Philadelphia
(PHL), San Francisco (SFO), San Juan (SJU), Seattle (SEA), and
Washington DC (IAD).
\19\ 88 FR 5348 (Jan. 27, 2023).
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At this time, CDC is extending the temporary suspension through
July 31, 2024, because of the continued risk for the reintroduction of
DMRVV into the United States. This extension is based on the increasing
number of dogs being purchased internationally,<SUP>20 21 22 23</SUP>
often from DMRVV high-risk countries, and imported into the United
States and other rabies-free countries. This increase in international
purchases of dogs is occurring contemporaneous with a high volume of
dogs being imported into the United States and continued disruptions to
rabies vaccination campaigns globally as a lingering effect of the
diversion of public health resources during the COVID-19 pandemic. The
rate of rabies in imported dogs is higher than the rate of domestically
acquired rabies in dogs. Disruptions to rabies vaccination campaigns
globally further elevate that risk, and CDC anticipates it will take at
least two years, and possibly longer, for global vaccination campaigns
to recover to pre-pandemic levels. This timeframe is based on modeling
data which suggest that when rabies vaccination coverage is disrupted
in rabies-free countries and cases begin occurring, countries can
prevent reestablishment of the disease in as little as 2 years if 38-
56% of the dog population is vaccinated annually.\24\ Additionally,
constraints on the global veterinary workforce capacity and global
veterinary supply chain shortages have led to delayed or disrupted care
for dogs, which also increases the likelihood dogs imported into the
United States may pose a public health
risk.<SUP>25 26 27 28 29 30</SUP>
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\20\ Pieracci, E., Williams, C., Wallace, R., Kalapura, C.,
Brown, C. U.S. dog importations during the COVID-19 pandemic: Do we
have an erupting problem? PLoS ONE,16(9), e0254287. doi: 10.1371/
journal.pone.0254287.
\21\ Wynne E. Dog lovers find prices rise steeply amid COVID-
fueled demand. Australian Broadcasting Corporation News. 20 May
2021.
\22\ Morgan L, Protopopova A, Birkler RID, Itin-Shwatz B, Sutton
G, Gamliel A, et al. Human-dog relationships during the COVID-19
pandemic: booming dog adoption during social isolation. Humanities
and Social Science Communications. 2021; 7(150): 1-11.
\23\ British Broadcasting Corporation. Illegal puppy trade
warning as sales boom during the COVID pandemic. 18 NOV 2020.
British Broadcasting Corporation News.
\24\ Jeon, S., Cleaton, J., Meltzer, M., Kahn, E., Pieracci, E.,
Blanton, J., Wallace, R. (2019). Determining the post-elimination
level of vaccination needed to prevent re-establishment of dog
rabies. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 13(12). <a href="https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007869">https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007869</a>.
\25\ Zhang S. The great veterinary shortage. The Atlantic. July
6, 2022. <a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2022/07/not-enough-veterinarians-animals/661497/">https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2022/07/not-enough-veterinarians-animals/661497/</a>.
\26\ Martin D. Is the veterinarian shortage real or regional?
<a href="http://AGCanada.com">AGCanada.com</a> July 16, 2021. <a href="https://www.agcanada.com/2021/07/is-the-veterinarian-shortage-real-or-regional">https://www.agcanada.com/2021/07/is-the-veterinarian-shortage-real-or-regional</a>.
\27\ The Business Research Company. Companion animal veterinary
vaccines global market report 2023 (. . .). <a href="https://www.thebusinessresearchcompany.com/report/companion-animal-veterinary-vaccines-global-market-report">https://www.thebusinessresearchcompany.com/report/companion-animal-veterinary-vaccines-global-market-report</a>.
\28\ Lewin R. Aussie dog owners warned of national vaccine
shortage as deadly bacterial disease spreads. 7 <a href="http://News.com">News.com</a>.au. October
17, 2022. <a href="https://7news.com.au/lifestyle/pets/aussie-dog-owners-warned-of-national-vaccine-shortage-as-deadly-bacterial-disease-spreads-c-8568550">https://7news.com.au/lifestyle/pets/aussie-dog-owners-warned-of-national-vaccine-shortage-as-deadly-bacterial-disease-spreads-c-8568550</a>.
\29\ Mathew R. Vaccine Shortage, Excess Workload of Vets Hamper
Anti-rabies Vaccination Programme. Manorama. September 24, 2022.
<a href="https://www.onmanorama.com/news/kerala/2022/09/24/kerala-anti-rabbies-vaccination-programme.html">https://www.onmanorama.com/news/kerala/2022/09/24/kerala-anti-rabbies-vaccination-programme.html</a>.
\30\ Rabies is Likely to Spread in Sri Lanka in 2023 due to
Vaccine Shortages. Business Standard. January 4, 2023. <a href="https://www.business-standard.com/article/international/rabies-is-likely-to-spread-in-sri-lanka-in-2023-due-to-vaccine-shortages-123010400640_1.html">https://www.business-standard.com/article/international/rabies-is-likely-to-spread-in-sri-lanka-in-2023-due-to-vaccine-shortages-123010400640_1.html</a>.
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CDC will continue to review and reassess its list of DMRVV high-
risk countries annually and as additional substantial data become
available.\31\ Such reviews are consistent with CDC practices. In
conducting this review, CDC will consider DMRVV high-risk countries'
rabies control programs, the latest scientific data, and international
recommendations for rabies control. For example, in January 2023, CDC
reviewed the list of DMRVV high-risk rabies countries and determined
that Brunei and Bhutan had documented sufficient levels of canine
rabies surveillance, canine vaccination, and laboratory testing over a
multi-year timespan and demonstrated success in controlling DMRVV
within their respective countries; as a result of this review Brunei
and Bhutan were removed from the CDC list of DMRVV high-risk countries.
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\31\ The web page that describes how CDC conducts the annual
assessment of individual countries' rabies status worldwide is
available at <a href="https://www.cdc.gov/rabies/resources/countries-risk.html">https://www.cdc.gov/rabies/resources/countries-risk.html</a>.
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II. Public Health Rationale
A. Dog Importation Into the United States
The United States was declared DMRVV-free in 2007. Importing dogs
from countries at high-risk for rabies involves a significant public
health risk. The importation of just one dog infected with DMRVV risks
re-introduction of the virus into the United States; such a public
health threat could result in loss of human and animal life and
[[Page 43573]]
consequential economic impact.<SUP>32 33 34</SUP> Of additional concern
is the fact that DMRVV has been highly successful at adapting to new
host species, particularly wildlife. One imported DMRVV-infected dog
could result in a new variant with potential to become established
within new host species in the United States.\35\
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\32\ World Bank (2012). People, Pathogens and Our Planet: The
Economics of One Health. Retrieved from <a href="https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/11892">https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/11892</a>.
\33\ Raybern, C., Zaldivar, A., Tubach, S., Ahmed, F., Moore,
S., Kintner, C., Garrison, I. (2020) Rabies in a dog imported from
Egypt-Kansas, 2019. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 69(38),
1374-1377. Retrieved from <a href="https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/pdfs/mm6938a5-H.pdf">https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/pdfs/mm6938a5-H.pdf</a>.
\34\ Jeon, S., Cleaton, J., Meltzer, M., Kahn, E., Pieracci, E.,
Blanton, J., Wallace, R. (2019). Determining the post-elimination
level of vaccination needed to prevent re-establishment of dog
rabies. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 13(12). <a href="https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007869">https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007869</a>.
\35\ Velasco-Villa, A., Mauldin, M., Shi, M., Escobar, L.,
Gallardo-Romero, N., Damon, I., Emerson, G. (2017) The history of
rabies in the Western Hemisphere. Antiviral Res, 146, 221-232.
doi:10.1016/j.antiviral.2017.03.013.
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Although the U.S. Government does not track the total number of
dogs imported each year, it is estimated that approximately 1 million
dogs are imported into the United States annually, of which 100,000
dogs are from DMRVV high-risk countries.\36\ This estimate was based on
information provided by airlines, CBP staff, and a study conducted at a
U.S.-Mexico land border crossing.\37\ Combined import data from CDC,
CBP, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) suggest that
adoptions, rescues, purchases, and international movement of dogs from
overseas have remained high since 2018.<SUP>38 39 40</SUP> Demand for
puppies and dogs imported for rescue, adoption, or resale has remained
high since 2021.<SUP>41 42 43 44</SUP> In light of the higher rate of
rabies among imported dogs compared to dogs in the United States, the
continued high volume of importations of dogs to the United States, and
the contemporaneous insufficient veterinary controls, inadequate
veterinary supply chains, and persistent workforce capacity shortages
in DMRVV high-risk countries, the risk of rabies importation into the
United States and re-introduction of DMRVV remains heightened.
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\36\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2019). Guidance
Regarding Agency Interpretation of ``Rabies-Free'' as It Relates to
the Importation of Dogs Into the United States. Federal Register,
Vol. 84,724-730. Retrieved from <a href="https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/01/31/2019-00506/guidance-regarding-agency-interpretation-of-rabies-free-as-it-relates-to-the-importation-of-dogs">https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/01/31/2019-00506/guidance-regarding-agency-interpretation-of-rabies-free-as-it-relates-to-the-importation-of-dogs</a>.
\37\ McQuiston, J.H., Wilson, T., Harris, S., Bacon, R.M.,
Shapiro, S., Trevino, J., Marano, N. (2008.) Importation of dogs
into the United States: risks from rabies and other zoonotic
diseases. Zoonoses Public Health, 55(8-10),421-6. doi:10.1111/
j.1863-2378.2008.01117.
\38\ Better Business Bureau. Online puppy scams rising sharply
in 2020, BBB warns. 2020 December 2. Available from: <a href="https://www.bbb.org/article/news-releases/23354-bbb-studyupdate-puppy-scams-rising-in-2020">https://www.bbb.org/article/news-releases/23354-bbb-studyupdate-puppy-scams-rising-in-2020</a>.
\39\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Internal dog
import data. August 2021-May 2023.
\40\ U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Live animal imports FY
2022 report to congress. Nov 4, 2022.
\41\ Pieracci, E., Williams, C., Wallace, R., Kalapura, C.,
Brown, C. U.S. dog importations during the COVID-19 pandemic: Do we
have an erupting problem? PLoS ONE,16(9), e0254287. doi: 10.1371/
journal.pone.0254287.
\42\ Wynne E. Dog lovers find prices rise steeply amid COVID-
fueled demand. Australian Broadcasting Corporation News. 20 May
2021.
\43\ Morgan L, Protopopova A, Birkler RID, Itin-Shwatz B, Sutton
G, Gamliel A, et al. Human-dog relationships during the COVID-19
pandemic: booming dog adoption during social isolation. Humanities
and Social Science Communications. 2021; 7(150): 1-11.
\44\ British Broadcasting Corporation. Illegal puppy trade
warning as sales boom during the COVID pandemic. 18 NOV 2020.
British Broadcasting Corporation News.
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The rate of rabies is 14 times higher in imported dogs when
compared to the rate of rabies acquired domestically by dogs in the
United States.<SUP>45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52</SUP> During 2015-2021 there
were approximately 700,000 dogs imported from DMRVV high-risk countries
of which four were found to have rabies upon entry into the United
States--an annual incidence rate of 5.7 per 1 million dogs imported. In
comparison, there were an estimated cumulative 616 million dogs in the
United States during that same time period,\53\ of which approximately
240 were found infected with an endemic wildlife variant of rabies
during the same time--an annual incidence rate of 0.4 per 1 million.
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\45\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Guidance
regarding agency interpretation of ``rabies-free'' as it relates to
the importation of dogs into the United States. Federal Register
Notice; 84 FR 724: 724-30. January 31, 2019. Available at: <a href="http://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/01/31/2019-00506/guidance-regarding-agency-interpretation-of-rabies-free-as-it-relates-to-the-importation-of-dogs">http://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/01/31/2019-00506/guidance-regarding-agency-interpretation-of-rabies-free-as-it-relates-to-the-importation-of-dogs</a>.
\46\ Ma X, Bonaparte S, Toro M, Orciari L, Gigante C, et al.
Rabies surveillance in the United States during 2020. Journal of the
American Veterinary Medical Association. 2022; 260 (10).
\47\ Birhane M, Cleaton J, Monroe BP, Wadhwa A, et al. Rabies
surveillance in the United States during 2015. Journal of the
American Veterinary Medical Association. 2017; 250 (10).
\48\ Ma X, Monroe BP, Cleaton J, Orciari L, Yager P, et al.
Rabies surveillance in the United States during 2016. Journal of the
American Veterinary Medical Association. 2018; 252 (8).
\49\ Ma X, Monroe BP, Cleaton J, Orciari L, Yu L, et al. Rabies
surveillance in the United States during 2017. Journal of the
American Veterinary Medical Association. 2018; 253 (12).
\50\ Ma X, Monroe BP, Wallace R, Orciari L, Gigante C, et al.
Rabies surveillance in the United States during 2019. Journal of the
American Veterinary Medical Association. 2021; 258 (11).
\51\ Ma X, Bonaparte S, Corbett P, Orciari L, Gigante C, et al.
Rabies surveillance in the United States during 2021. Journal of the
American Veterinary Medical Association. 2023. DOI: <a href="https://doi.org/10.2460/javma.23.02.0081">https://doi.org/10.2460/javma.23.02.0081</a>.
\52\ Ma X, Monroe BP, Cleaton J, Orciari L, Gigante C, et al.
Public veterinary medicine: Public health: Rabies surveillance in
the United States during 2018. Journal of the American Veterinary
Medical Association. 2020; 256 (2).
\53\ American Veterinary Medical Association. U.S. pet
statistics. Available at: <a href="http://ebusiness.avma.org/files/ProductDownloads/eco-pet-demographic-report-22-low-res.pdf">ebusiness.avma.org/files/ProductDownloads/eco-pet-demographic-report-22-low-res.pdf</a>.
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All four rabid dogs imported into the United States during the
2015-2021 period were imported by rescue organizations for the purposes
of adoption. These four cases, discussed below, highlight the immense
public health resources required to investigate, respond to, and
mitigate the public health threat posed by the importation of a rabid
dog.
In 2015, a rabid dog was part of a group of eight dogs and 27 cats
imported from Egypt by a rescue group. The dog had an unhealed leg
fracture and began showing signs of rabies four days after arrival.
Following the rabies diagnosis, the rescue workers in Egypt admitted
that the dog's rabies vaccination certificate had been intentionally
falsified to evade CDC entry requirements.\54\ Eighteen people were
recommended to receive rabies post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP), seven
dogs underwent a six-month quarantine, and eight additional dogs housed
in the same home as the rabid dog had to receive rabies booster
vaccinations and undergo a 45-day monitoring period.
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\54\ Sinclair J., Wallace, R., Gruszynski K., Bibbs Freeman, M.,
Campbell, C., Semple, S., Murphy, J. (2015). Rabies in a dog
imported from Egypt with a falsified rabies vaccination
certificate--Virginia. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 64,
1359-62. doi:10.15585/mmwr.mm6449a2.
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In 2017, a ``flight parent'' (a person typically solicited through
social media, often not affiliated with the rescue organization, and
usually compensated with an airline ticket) imported four dogs on
behalf of a rescue organization. One of the dogs appeared agitated at
the airport and bit the flight parent prior to the flight. A U.S.
veterinarian examined the dog one day after its arrival and then
euthanized and tested the dog for rabies. A post-mortem rabies test
showed that the dog was positive for the virus. Public health officials
recommended that at least four people receive rabies PEP, and the
remaining three dogs underwent quarantine periods ranging from 30 days
to six months. An investigation revealed the possibility of
[[Page 43574]]
falsified rabies vaccination documentation presented on entry to the
United States.\55\
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\55\ Hercules, Y., Bryant, N., Wallace, R., Nelson, R., Palumbo,
G., Williams, J., Brown, C. (2018). Rabies in a dog imported from
Egypt--Connecticut, 2017. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 67,
1388-91. doi:10.15585/mmwr.mm6750a3.
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In 2019, a rescue group imported 26 dogs, all of which had rabies
vaccination certificates and serologic documentation indicating the
development of rabies antibodies in response to immunization, based on
results from an Egyptian Government-affiliated rabies laboratory.
However, one dog developed signs of rabies three weeks after arrival
and had to be euthanized. The dog tested positive for rabies. As a
result, forty-four people received rabies PEP and the 25 dogs imported
on the same flight underwent re-vaccination and quarantines of four to
six months. An additional 12 dogs had contact with the rabid dog and
had to be re-vaccinated and undergo quarantine periods ranging from 45
days to six months based on their previous vaccination status.\56\ The
public health investigations and rabies PEP of exposed persons in this
case cost more than $400,000 in state resources.<SUP>57 58</SUP>
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\56\ Raybern, C., Zaldivar, A., Tubach, S., Ahmed, F., Moore,
S., Kintner, C., Garrison, I. (2020) Rabies in a dog imported from
Egypt-Kansas, 2019. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 69(38),
1374-1377. Retrieved from <a href="https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/pdfs/mm6938a5-H.pdf">https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/pdfs/mm6938a5-H.pdf</a>.
\57\ Id.
\58\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2022). Rabies
Postexposure Prophylaxis. Retrieved from <a href="https://www.cdc.gov/rabies/medical_care/index.html">https://www.cdc.gov/rabies/medical_care/index.html</a>.
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On June 10, 2021, shortly before CDC published the temporary
suspension, 33 dogs were imported into the United States from
Azerbaijan by a rescue organization. All dogs had rabies vaccination
certificates that appeared valid upon arrival in the United States. One
dog developed signs of rabies three days after arrival and was
euthanized. CDC confirmed the dog was infected with a variant of DMRVV
known to circulate in the Caucus Mountain region of Azerbaijan. The
remaining rescue animals exposed to the rabid dog during travel were
dispersed across nine states, leading to what is believed to be the
largest, multi-state investigation of imported rabid dogs in U.S.
history.\59\ Eighteen people received PEP to prevent rabies as a result
of exposure to this one rabid dog. Post-vaccination serologic
monitoring of the remaining dogs and the public health investigation
revealed that improper vaccination practices by the veterinarian in
Azerbaijan likely contributed to the inadequate vaccination response
documented in 48 percent of the imported animals, including the rabid
dog.\60\ The 33 exposed animals were placed in quarantine periods
ranging from 45 days to six months based on individual serologic titer
test results and local jurisdictional requirements.\61\
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\59\ Whitehill F, Bonaparte S, Hartloge C, et al. Rabies in a
Dog Imported from Azerbaijan- Pennsylvania, 2021. MMWR Morb Mortal
Wkly Rep 2022; 71: 686-689.
\60\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2021). CDC
responds to a case of rabies in an imported dog. Retrieved from
<a href="https://www.cdc.gov/worldrabiesday/disease-detectives/rabies-imported-dog.html">https://www.cdc.gov/worldrabiesday/disease-detectives/rabies-imported-dog.html</a>.
\61\ Whitehill F, Bonaparte S, Hartloge C, et al. Rabies in a
Dog Imported from Azerbaijan- Pennsylvania, 2021. MMWR Morb Mortal
Wkly Rep 2022; 71: 686-689.
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CDC estimates that costs for public health investigations and
subsequent cost of care for people exposed to rabid dogs range from
$220,897 to $521,828 per importation event, as summarized in an
economic analysis found on CDC's website.<SUP>62 63 64</SUP> This cost
estimate does not account for the worst-case outcomes, which include:
(1) transmission of rabies to a person who dies from the disease; and
(2) ongoing transmission to other domestic animals and wildlife species
in the United States. The U.S. National Rabies Control Program was
started in 1944 and required decades of consistent dog vaccination and
animal control programs to eliminate DMRVV from the United States.
While the cost has never been published it is estimated to approach 1
billion USD in direct rabies control costs.\65\
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\62\ Raybern, C., Zaldivar, A., Tubach, S., Ahmed, F., Moore,
S., Kintner, C., Garrison, I. (2020) Rabies in a dog imported from
Egypt-Kansas, 2019. MMWR Morb Mort Wkly Rep, 69(38), 1374-1377.
Retrieved from <a href="https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/pdfs/mm6938a5-H.pdf">https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/pdfs/mm6938a5-H.pdf</a>.
\63\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2019). Guidance
Regarding Agency Interpretation of ``Rabies-Free'' as It Relates to
the Importation of Dogs Into the United States. Federal Register,
Vol. 84,724-730. Retrieved from <a href="https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/01/31/2019-00506/guidance-regarding-agency-interpretation-of-rabies-free-as-it-relates-to-the-importation-of-dogs">https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/01/31/2019-00506/guidance-regarding-agency-interpretation-of-rabies-free-as-it-relates-to-the-importation-of-dogs</a>.
\64\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2023). What is
a Valid Rabies Vaccination Certificate? Retrieved from <a href="https://www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/vaccine-certificate.html">https://www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/vaccine-certificate.html</a>.
\65\ Based on assessments made by CDC Rabies Subject Matter
Experts from annual operating costs to fund the U.S. national rabies
control program including dog vaccination and post exposure
prophylaxis costs.
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Re-establishment of DMRVV in the United States would result in
costly, years' long efforts to eliminate the virus again. The
extraordinary cost of re-introduction of DMRVV is demonstrated by an
instance of reintroduction that occurred in Texas, where DMRVV had been
previously eliminated. The reintroduction lasted from 1995-2003 and
resulted in several human deaths; the subsequent re-elimination of
DMRVV cost $60 million (in 2022 USD) and required over 10 years of
effort.<SUP>66 67</SUP>
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\66\ Thomas, S., Wilson, P., Moore, G., Oertli, E., Hicks, B.,
Rohde, R., Johnston, D. (2005). Evaluation of oral rabies
vaccination programs for control of rabies epizootics in coyotes and
gray foxes: 1995-2003. Journal of the American Veterinary Medicine
Association, 227(5),785-92. doi: 10.2460/javma.2005.227.785.
\67\ Sterner, R., Meltzer, M., Shwiff, S., Slate, D. (2009).
Tactics and Economics of Wildlife Oral Rabies Vaccination, Canada
and the United States. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 15(8), 1176-
1184. doi: 10.3201/eid1508.081061.
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B. Insufficient Canine Vaccination Rates and Veterinary Controls in
DMRVV High-Risk Countries To Prevent the Export of Inadequately
Vaccinated Dogs
Historically, approximately 60 to 70 percent of CDC's dog entry
denials (or about 200 cases annually) have been based on fraudulent,
incomplete, or inaccurate paperwork.\68\ This number is less than one
percent of dog importations. However, between January 2020 and July
2021 (i.e., during the COVID-19 pandemic, prior to the temporary
suspension taking effect), CDC documented more than 1000 instances of
incomplete, inadequate, or fraudulent rabies vaccination certificates
for dogs arriving from DMRVV high-risk countries.\69\ These cases
resulted in dogs being denied entry into the United States and
ultimately returned to their country of origin.
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\68\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2021).
Quarantine Activity Reporting System (version 4.9.8.8.2.2A). Dog
Importation data, 2010-2019. Accessed 1 October 2022.
\69\ Pieracci, E., Williams, C., Wallace, R., Kalapura, C.,
Brown, C. U.S. dog importations during the COVID-19 pandemic: Do we
have an erupting problem? PLoS ONE,16(9), e0254287. doi: 10.1371/
journal.pone.0254287.
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The significant increase in the number of dogs from DMRVV high-risk
countries arriving with incomplete, inadequate, or fraudulent rabies
vaccination certificates observed in 2020 and 2021 coincided with
increased interest in purchasing dogs from the international rescues
and breeders during the COVID-19 pandemic.<SUP>70 71 72</SUP> One study
noted a global increase in
[[Page 43575]]
internet searches on Google regarding dog adoption during the
pandemic.\73\ Since 2021, the demand for puppies and rescue dogs has
remained high. The trend in purchasing and rescuing dogs from abroad
has been noted in many countries, including the United
States.<SUP>74 75 76 77</SUP> Internationally, there has been
significant growth within the companion animal breeding industry with
increasing international trade.\78\ Multiple international and U.S.
investigations have identified importations of puppies that were too
young to meet rabies vaccination requirements.<SUP>79 80 81 82</SUP>
There is growing evidence that criminal networks are becoming involved
in the lucrative dog trade, and illegal puppy trade was reported to
have increased during the pandemic.<SUP>83 84 85</SUP>
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\70\ Pieracci, E., Williams, C., Wallace, R., Kalapura, C.,
Brown, C. U.S. dog importations during the COVID-19 pandemic: Do we
have an erupting problem? PLoS ONE,16(9), e0254287. doi: 10.1371/
journal.pone.0254287.
\71\ Wynne E. Dog lovers find prices rise steeply amid COVID-
fueled demand. Australian Broadcasting Corporation News. 20 May
2021.
\72\ Morgan L, Protopopova A, Birkler RID, Itin-Shwatz B, Sutton
G, Gamliel A, et al. Human-dog relationships during the COVID-19
pandemic: booming dog adoption during social isolation. Humanities
and Social Science Communications. 2021; 7(150): 1-11.
\73\ Id.
\74\ Pieracci, E., Williams, C., Wallace, R., Kalapura, C.,
Brown, C. U.S. dog importations during the COVID-19 pandemic: Do we
have an erupting problem? PLoS ONE,16(9), e0254287. doi: 10.1371/
journal.pone.0254287.
\75\ Wynne E. Dog lovers find prices rise steeply amid COVID-
fueled demand. Australian Broadcasting Corporation News. 20 May
2021.
\76\ Morgan L, Protopopova A, Birkler RID, Itin-Shwatz B, Sutton
G, Gamliel A, et al. Human-dog relationships during the COVID-19
pandemic: booming dog adoption during social isolation. Humanities
and Social Science Communications. 2021; 7(150): 1-11.
\77\ Velez M. I adopted my dog Cannoli from overseas. It's
easier than you think. 9/20/2020. Available at: <a href="https://www.thedailybeast.com/i-adopted-my-dog-cannoli-from-overseas-its-easier-than-you-think">https://www.thedailybeast.com/i-adopted-my-dog-cannoli-from-overseas-its-easier-than-you-think</a>.
\78\ Maher J, Wyatt T. European illegal puppy trade and
organized crime. Trends in Organized Crime. 2021; 24(4) 506-525.
\79\ Pieracci, E., Williams, C., Wallace, R., Kalapura, C.,
Brown, C. U.S. dog importations during the COVID-19 pandemic: Do we
have an erupting problem? PLoS ONE,16(9), e0254287. doi: 10.1371/
journal.pone.0254287.
\80\ Zucca P, Rossman MC, Osorio JE, Karem K, De Benedictis P,
Haifsl J, et al. The `bio-crime model' of cross-border cooperation
among veterinary public health, justice, law enforcements, and
customs to tackle the illegal animal trade/bio-terrorism and to
prevent the spread of zoonotic diseases among human population.
Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2020; 7: 1-13.
\81\ Cocchi M, Danesi P, DeZan G, Leati M, Gagliazzo L, et al. A
three-year biocrime sanitary surveillance on illegally imported
companion animals. Pathogens. 2021; 10(80):1-12.
\82\ Houle MK. Perspective from the field: Illegal puppy imports
uncovered at JFK airport. 2017. Available at: <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/ncezid/dgmq/feature-stories/operation-dog-catcher.html">www.cdc.gov/ncezid/dgmq/feature-stories/operation-dog-catcher.html</a>.
\83\ Maher J, Wyatt T. Rural-urban dynamics in the UK illegal
puppy trade: trafficking and trade in man's best friend.
International Journal of Rural Law and Policy. 2019; 9 (2): 1-20.
\84\ Zucca P, Rossman MC, Osorio JE, Karem K, De Benedictis P,
Haifsl J, et al. The `bio-crime model' of cross-border cooperation
among veterinary public health, justice, law enforcements, and
customs to tackle the illegal animal trade/bio-terrorism and to
prevent the spread of zoonotic diseases among human population.
Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2020; 7: 1-13.
\85\ British Broadcasting Corporation. Illegal puppy trade
warning as sales boom during the COVID pandemic. 18 NOV 2020.
British Broadcasting Corporation News.
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Additionally, reports of international movement of animals with
missing microchips, no proof of rabies vaccination, or underage dogs
with fraudulent vaccination records have been documented in the United
States and abroad.<SUP>86 87</SUP> The increases in international dog
movement and fraudulent or questionable paperwork have raised concerns
among state and local animal and health departments, breeders and dog
organizations, and veterinary associations. A rabies serological
(antibody) titer is an estimation of an immune response against rabies
virus (either through exposure or vaccination). While there is no
``protective'' titer against rabies virus, survival against rabies
virus infection is often more likely to occur the higher the animal's
titer at the time of infection.\88\ The World Organisation for Animal
Health considers a level of 0.5 IU/mL a ``passing'' antibody titer
level.
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\86\ Pieracci, E., Williams, C., Wallace, R., Kalapura, C.,
Brown, C. U.S. dog importations during the COVID-19 pandemic: Do we
have an erupting problem? PLoS ONE,16(9), e0254287. doi: 10.1371/
journal.pone.0254287.
\87\ Zucca P, Rossman MC, Osorio JE, Karem K, De Benedictis P,
Haifsl J, et al. The `bio-crime model' of cross-border cooperation
among veterinary public health, justice, law enforcements, and
customs to tackle the illegal animal trade/bio-terrorism and to
prevent the spread of zoonotic diseases among human population.
Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2020; 7: 1-13.
\88\ CDC. Rabies Serology. Available at: <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/rabies/specific_groups/hcp/serology.html#What%20Does%20A%20Rabies%20Virus%20Titer%20Mean">www.cdc.gov/rabies/specific_groups/hcp/serology.html#What%20Does%20A%20Rabies%20Virus%20Titer%20Mean</a>?
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A 2015 study found that 53% of imported rescue dogs arriving in
Norway with rabies vaccinations administered at least 21 days before
arrival had titers less than 0.5 IU/mL.\89\ Nineteen percent of dogs in
the study had titers less than 0.1 IU/mL, ``raising concerns as to
whether they had been vaccinated against rabies at all.'' \90\ Two
rabid dog importation events in the United States were also extensively
evaluated, including serological evaluation of all dogs that were
transported together. In these two events, one in 2019 and one in 2021,
44% (25 of 57) of dogs failed to mount an anamnestic response to
booster vaccination; an indication that they were unvaccinated or
inappropriately vaccinated prior to arrival in the US.<SUP>91 92</SUP>
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\89\ Klevar S, Hogasen HR, Davidson RK, Hammes IS, Treiberg
Berndtsson L, LundA. Cross-border transport of rescue dogs may
spread rabies in Europe. The Veterinary Record. 2015; 176 (26): 672.
\90\ Id.
\91\ Raybern, C., Zaldivar, A., Tubach, S., Ahmed, F., Moore,
S., Kintner, C., Garrison, I. (2020) Rabies in a dog imported from
Egypt-Kansas, 2019. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 69(38),
1374-1377. Retrieved from <a href="https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/pdfs/mm6938a5-H.pdf">https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/pdfs/mm6938a5-H.pdf</a>.
\92\ Whitehill F, Bonaparte S, Hartloge C, et al. Rabies in a
Dog Imported from Azerbaijan- Pennsylvania, 2021. MMWR Morb Mortal
Wkly Rep 2022; 71: 686-689.
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During the COVID-19 pandemic, canine rabies vaccination campaigns
were suspended in many DMRVV high-risk countries, which resulted in an
increase in canine and human rabies cases.<SUP>93 94</SUP> The pause in
canine vaccination campaigns and the delay in re-establishing pre-COVID
rabies vaccination rates in dogs in many DMRVV high-risk countries,
combined with insufficient veterinary controls to prevent or eliminate
DMRVV within a country,\95\ as well as prevent the exportation of
inadequately vaccinated dogs with fraudulent paperwork, presents an
ongoing and significant public health risk.
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\93\ Kunkel, A., Jeon, S., Joseph, H., Dilius, P., Crowdis, K.,
Meltzer, M., Wallace, R. (2021). The urgency of resuming disrupted
dog rabies vaccination campaigns: a modeling and cost-effectiveness
analysis. Scientific Reports, 11, 12476. doi:10.1038/s41598-021-
92067-5.
\94\ Raynor, B., D[iacute]az, E,, Shinnick, J., Zegarra, E.,
Monroy, Y., Mena. C., . . . Castillo-Neyra, R.(2021). The impact of
the COVID-19 pandemic on rabies reemergence in Latin America: The
case of Arequipa, Peru. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 15(5),
e0009414. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0009414.
\95\ WHO Expert Consultation on Rabies, third report. Geneva:
World Health Organization; 2018 (WHO Technical Report Series, No.
1012). License: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO.
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A survey of global, regional, national, and local partners from the
network of the United Against Rabies Forum \96\ and rabies
practitioners found that the global COVID-19 pandemic impacted rabies
control efforts in many DMRVV high-risk countries during 2020. The
study authors reported that dog vaccinations were administered as
planned in just four percent of the countries for which data were
available. Around half of respondents reported that funds for rabies
control were diverted to COVID-19 activities. Among respondents who
reported diversion of rabies control funds to COVID-19 responses, they
reported that animal rabies vaccines and dog vaccination campaigns were
often the first rabies control activities to be cut.\97\
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\96\ A forum supported by the Food and Agriculture Organization
of the United Nations, the World Organisation for Animal Health, and
the World Health Organization (the Tripartite), which takes a multi-
sectoral, One Health approach bringing together governments, vaccine
producers, researchers, non-governmental organizations and
development partners to end human deaths from dog-mediated rabies.
\97\ Nadal D, Abela-Ridder B, Beeching S, Cleaveland S, Cronin
K, Steenson R and Hampson K (2022). The Impact of the First Year of
the COVID-19 Pandemic on Canine Rabies Control Efforts: A Mixed-
Methods Study of Observations About the Present and Lessons for the
Future. Front Trop Dis 3:866811.doi: 10.3389/fitd.2022.866811.
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[[Page 43576]]
Additionally, global veterinary workforce capacity and global
veterinary supply chain shortages that have led to delayed or disrupted
care for dogs (and other pets) have been exacerbated by the COVID-19
pandemic. The lack of veterinarians, veterinary technicians, and other
animal care staff who are available to provide care for dogs prior to
travel, combined with a lack of veterinary supplies such as drugs and
vaccines, increase the likelihood dogs imported into the United States
may pose a public health threat. <SUP>98 99 100 101</SUP> Challenges
with rabies vaccine administration, distribution, potency, quality, and
storage in many countries also contributed to inadequate protection
against rabies prior to the pandemic; these challenges continue as
public health infrastructure recovers post-
pandemic.<SUP>102 103 104 105</SUP> The extension of the temporary
suspension is intended to provide time for CDC and its partners to
build a robust dog importation system that better protects U.S. public
health from these challenges.
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\98\ Zhang S. The great veterinary shortage. The Atlantic. July
6,2022. <a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2022/07/not-enough-veterinarians-animals/661497/">https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2022/07/not-enough-veterinarians-animals/661497/</a>.
\99\ Martin D. Is the veterinarian shortage real or regional?
<a href="http://AGCanada.com">AGCanada.com</a> July 16, 2021. <a href="https://www.agcanada.com/2021/07/is-the-veterinarian-shortage-real-or-regional">https://www.agcanada.com/2021/07/is-the-veterinarian-shortage-real-or-regional</a>.
\100\ The Business Research Company. Companion animal veterinary
vaccines global market report 2023 (. . .). <a href="https://www.thebusinessresearchcompany.com/report/companion-animal-veterinary-vaccines-global-market-report">https://www.thebusinessresearchcompany.com/report/companion-animal-veterinary-vaccines-global-market-report</a>.
\101\ Lewin R. Aussie dog owners warned of national vaccine
shortage as deadly bacterial disease spreads. 7 <a href="http://News.com">News.com</a>.au. October
17,2022. <a href="https://7news.com.au/lifestyle/pets/aussie-dog-owners-warned-of-national-vaccine-shortage-as-deadly-bacterial-disease-spreads-c-8568550">https://7news.com.au/lifestyle/pets/aussie-dog-owners-warned-of-national-vaccine-shortage-as-deadly-bacterial-disease-spreads-c-8568550</a>.
\102\ Hu RL, Fooks AR, Zhang SF, Liu Y, Zhang F. Inferior rabies
vaccine quality and low immunization coverage in dogs in China.
Epidemiol Infect. 2008; 136: 1556-63.
\103\ Yale G, Sudarshan S, Taj S, Patchimuthu GI, Mangalanathan
BV, et al. Investigation of protective level of rabies antibodies in
vaccinated dogs in Chennai, India. VetRecord. 2021; 8: e8.
\104\ Whitehill F, Bonaparte S, Hartloge C, et al. Rabies in a
Dog Imported from Azerbaijan- Pennsylvania, 2021. MMWR Morb Mortal
Wkly Rep 2022; 71: 686-689.
\105\ Rota Modari E, Alonso S, Mancin M, De Nardi M, Hudson-
Cooke S, Veggiato C, et al. Rabies vaccination: higher failure rates
in imported dogs than those vaccinated in Italy. Zoonoses and Public
Health 2022; 64 (2): 146-55.
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C. Potentially Unsafe Conditions for Dogs Arriving From DMRVV High-Risk
Countries Without Appropriate Rabies Vaccination Certificates
Prior to the implementation of the temporary suspension of the
importation of dogs from countries at high-risk for rabies in July
2021, dogs arriving from DMRVV high-risk countries without appropriate
rabies vaccination certificates were denied entry to the United States
and returned to the country of origin on the next available
flight.\106\ Airlines were required to house dogs awaiting return to
their country of origin at a facility meeting the USDA's Animal Welfare
Act standards, preferably a live animal care facility with an active
custodial bond and a FIRMS code issued by CBP. If a live animal care
facility with a CBP-issued FIRMS code was not available, the airline
was required to, at a minimum, provide accommodation meeting the USDA's
Animal Welfare Act standards.\107\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\106\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2019).
Guidance Regarding Agency Interpretation of ``Rabies-Free'' as It
Relates to the Importation of Dogs Into the United States. Federal
Register, Vol. 84,724-730. Retrieved from <a href="https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/01/31/2019-00506/guidance-regarding-agency-interpretation-of-rabies-free-as-it-relates-to-the-importation-of-dogs">https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/01/31/2019-00506/guidance-regarding-agency-interpretation-of-rabies-free-as-it-relates-to-the-importation-of-dogs</a>.
\107\ U.S. Department of Agriculture (2020). Animal Welfare
Regulations; Part 3, Subpart A: Transportation Standards. Sections
3.14-3.20. Retrieved from <a href="https://www.aphis.usda.gov/animal_welfare/downloads/AC_BlueBook_AWA_508_comp_version.pdf">https://www.aphis.usda.gov/animal_welfare/downloads/AC_BlueBook_AWA_508_comp_version.pdf</a>.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, due to the prolonged periods of time between flights, some
airlines housed dogs in cargo warehouses. These accommodations created
an unsafe environment for dogs because of inadequate cooling and
heating, poor cleaning and sanitization of crates, and inability to
physically separate the animals from areas of the warehouse where other
equipment, machinery, and goods are used and stored. Cargo warehouse
staff who are not trained to house, clean, and care for live animals
with appropriate personal protective equipment were at risk of bites,
scratches, and exposures to potentially infectious bodily fluids from
dogs left in cargo warehouses.
Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, there were fewer international
flights worldwide in 2020,<SUP>108 109</SUP> resulting in delayed
returns for dogs denied entry. In August 2020, a dog denied entry based
on falsified rabies vaccination certificates later died while in the
custody of an airline at Chicago O'Hare International Airport. Despite
CDC's request to find appropriate housing at a local kennel or
veterinary clinic, the airline left the dog, along with 17 other dogs,
in a cargo warehouse without food and water for more than 48
hours.\110\
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\108\ Josephs, L. (2020). American Airlines cutting
international summer schedule by 60% as coronavirus drives down
demand. CNBC. Retrieved from <a href="https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/02/coronavirus-update-american-airlines-cuts-summer-international-flights-by-60percent-as-demand-suffers.html">https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/02/coronavirus-update-american-airlines-cuts-summer-international-flights-by-60percent-as-demand-suffers.html</a>.
\109\ American Airlines (2020). American Airlines announces
additional schedule changes in response to customer demand related
to COVID-19. American Airlines Newsroom. Retrieved from <a href="https://news.aa.com/news/news-details/2020/American-Airlines-Announces-Additional-Schedule-Changes-in-Response-to-Customer-Demand-Related-to-COVID-19-031420-OPS-DIS-03/default.aspx">https://news.aa.com/news/news-details/2020/American-Airlines-Announces-Additional-Schedule-Changes-in-Response-to-Customer-Demand-Related-to-COVID-19-031420-OPS-DIS-03/default.aspx</a>.
\110\ CBS Broadcasting (2020). Dog dies at O'Hare Airport
warehouse, 17 others saved after being left without food or water
for 3 days. CBS Chicago. Retrieved from <a href="https://www.cbsnews.com/chicago/news/dog-dies-at-ohare-airport-warehouse-17-others-saved-after-being-left-without-food-or-water-for-3-days">https://www.cbsnews.com/chicago/news/dog-dies-at-ohare-airport-warehouse-17-others-saved-after-being-left-without-food-or-water-for-3-days</a>.
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While costs associated with housing, caring for, and returning dogs
are the responsibility of the importer (or airline if the importer
abandons the dog), some importers and airlines are reluctant to pay
these costs, requiring the U.S. Government to find appropriate interim
housing facilities and veterinary care. The cost for housing, care, and
returning improperly vaccinated dogs ranges between $1,000 and $4,000
per dog, depending on the location and time required until the next
available return flight. Because there is no reimbursement system in
place, and seeking reimbursement is administratively challenging, the
U.S. Government is left to bear these costs when airlines and importers
do not. From May through December 2020, CDC spent more than 3,000
personnel-hours at an estimated cost of $270,000 to respond to the
attempted importation of unvaccinated or inadequately vaccinated dogs
from DMRVV high-risk countries. The time spent represented a
substantial increase from previous years due to (1) the increase in
dogs with inadequate documentation; and (2) the additional time spent
identifying interim accommodations for the dogs because of the reduced
outbound international flight schedules due to the pandemic.
During 2020, CDC observed a 52 percent increase (from an average of
300 to 450) in the number of dogs found to be ineligible for entry
compared to 2018 and 2019.\111\ The trend continued in the first half
of 2021 when there was a 24 percent increase (from 450 to 560) in the
number of dogs ineligible for entry
[[Page 43577]]
compared to the whole of 2020.\112\ From January 1, 2021, to July 13,
2021, prior to CDC's temporary suspension taking effect, there were 16
sick dogs and 18 dead dogs reported to CDC upon arrival in the United
States. From July 14, 2021, when the temporary suspension was initially
implemented, to March 1, 2023, CDC has denied entry to 185 dogs, and 12
sick dogs and 34 deaths have been reported to CDC. This substantial
decrease in the number of dogs denied entry (average of 93 dogs/month
pre-suspension compared to 8 dogs/month during the suspension) since
the implementation of the temporary suspension and reduced number of
sick and dead dogs (average of 3 sick dogs/month pre-suspension
compared to 0.6 sick dogs/month during the suspension; 3 dead dogs/
month compared to 1.6 dead dogs/month during the suspension) arriving
in the United States has resulted in an estimated $46,000 to $154,000
in cost savings to importers and $2,400 to $120,000 in cost savings to
Federal, state, and local public health and animal health agencies when
comparing the two periods. The risk of dogs dying while being held in
unsafe conditions continues however and, in the absence of a return to
pre-pandemic global vaccination campaigns and public health resources,
would likely be exacerbated if the temporary suspension were to be
lifted at this time. For example, in March 2023, a dog arrived at a
port of entry without a CDC-approved animal care facility and was
housed by the airline in a cargo warehouse where it was later found
dead.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\111\ Pieracci, E., Williams, C., Wallace, R., Kalapura, C.,
Brown, C. U.S. dog importations during the COVID-19 pandemic: Do we
have an erupting problem? PLoS ONE,16(9), e0254287. doi: 10.1371/
journal.pone.0254287.
\112\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Quarantine
Activity Reporting System (version 4.9.8.8.2.2A). Dog Importation
data, January 1, 2021-July 14, 2021. Accessed: 04 January 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since the temporary suspension initially took effect in mid-July
2021, the number of dogs denied entry and the number of sick and dead
dogs has decreased substantially despite the increased communicable
disease risk due to pandemic-related disruptions to vaccination
programs in DMRVV high-risk countries and veterinary supply chain and
staffing shortages worldwide. These data constitute strong evidence
that the suspension has been effective at preventing the importation of
dogs that present a communicable disease risk that would otherwise
require significant U.S. resources to address. Prior to the temporary
suspension, an increasing number of dogs were denied entry into the
United States in 2020 and 2021, and there were fewer international
flights in 2020 and 2021 compared to 2022.\113\ If the increased number
of international flights in 2023 corresponds with numbers of dogs
denied entry per flight in 2020 and 2021, then lifting the temporary
suspension at this time, absent other public health measures, could
result in a number of dogs denied entry equal to or greater than pre-
suspension numbers. A concomitant increase in the number of sick, dead,
or inadequately vaccinated dogs arriving in the United States could
quickly overwhelm local public health and veterinary healthcare systems
which do not have resources to provide long-term care or quarantine for
imported dogs.
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\113\ U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics. (2022) August
2022 U.S. Airline Traffic Data. <a href="https://www.bts.gov/newsroom/august-2022-us-airline-traffic-data">https://www.bts.gov/newsroom/august-2022-us-airline-traffic-data</a>.
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Because there remains an elevated level of risk of a rabid dog
being imported into the United States and responding to imports of
potentially rabid dogs or dogs with other communicable illnesses of
public health concern requires significant veterinary and public health
resources, lifting the temporary suspension would be unwarranted at
this time.
Instead, CDC is extending the temporary suspension for dogs
arriving into the United States from DMRVV high-risk countries. Given
that temporary suspension has proven successful in preventing the
reintroduction of DMRVV into the United States and has resulted in a
decrease in the number of issues with imported dogs (i.e., suspected
fraudulent documentation, dogs abandoned by importers, sick and dead
dogs arriving in the United States) compared to the period prior to the
temporary suspension, maintaining the current requirements for dog
importation should not result in an increased need for veterinary and
public health resources to address dog importation issues. As noted
above, in a companion document published elsewhere in this Federal
Register, CDC is proposing a rule revising entry requirements that
outlines a framework and set of operations that would mitigate the need
for further extensions of the temporary suspension, should these
procedures be adopted.
III. Conditions for Entry of U.S.-Vaccinated Dogs During the Extension
CDC is extending without modification the terms of the current
temporary suspension, which was effective February 1, 2023. Dogs
returning to the United States from DMRVV high-risk countries with a
valid U.S.-issued rabies vaccination certificate will be allowed to
enter the United States without a CDC Dog Import Permit, if the dog:
<bullet> Is six-months of age or older;
<bullet> Has an International Standards Organization (ISO)-
compatible microchip;
<bullet> Arrives at one of 18 CDC-approved ports of entry with CDC-
staffed quarantine stations; and
<bullet> Has a valid U.S. rabies vaccination certificate
documenting that the dog was vaccinated against rabies by a U.S.-
licensed veterinarian in the United States on or after the date the dog
was 12 weeks (84 days) of age and at least four weeks (28 days) before
the date of arrival in the United States if it was the dog's first
rabies vaccine. The rabies vaccination certificate must include:
[cir] Name and address of owner;
[cir] Breed, sex, date of birth (approximate age if date of birth
unknown), color, markings, and other identifying information for the
dog;
[cir] Microchip number;
[cir] Date of rabies vaccination and date next vaccine is due
(i.e., date the vaccination expires);
[cir] Vaccine manufacturer, product name, lot number, and product
expiration date; and
[cir] Name, license number, address, and signature of veterinarian
who administered the vaccination.
U.S. veterinarians, at their option, may choose to include the
above information on the CDC Rabies Vaccination and Microchip Record
\114\ for U.S.-vaccinated dogs prior to traveling outside the United
States, but completion of the form is not required for a U.S.-
vaccinated dog's re-entry into the United States if all other necessary
information has been provided.
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\114\ (OMB No. 0920-1383); the form is available for download
online at: <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/dogpermit">www.cdc.gov/dogpermit</a>.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
U.S.-vaccinated dogs with expired U.S. rabies vaccination
certificates must meet the requirements for foreign-vaccinated dogs
after being revaccinated prior to U.S. entry.
There is no limit on the number of U.S.-vaccinated dogs with valid
U.S.-issued rabies vaccination certificates that an importer can
import.
These requirements are consistent with CDC's practices as of
December 1, 2021 and are a continuation of the terms of the extended
temporary suspension announced in the January 27, 2023 Federal Register
notice.\115\
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\115\ 88 FR 5348 (Jan. 27, 2023), effective February 1, 2023.
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[[Page 43578]]
IV. Conditions for Entry of Foreign-Vaccinated Dogs With a CDC Dog
Import Permit During the Extension
CDC is continuing to require foreign-vaccinated dogs to meet the
terms of the temporary suspension published in the January 27, 2023
Federal Register notice.\116\ Importers of personal pet dogs may
receive up to two CDC Dog Import Permits (i.e., permits for two dogs)
during the temporary suspension period.\117\ Commercial importers and
personal pet owners who do not have serologic titer results or CDC Dog
Import Permits for their dogs will also continue to have an alternate
pathway for importation as outlined in Section V.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\116\ Id.
\117\ The two-permit limit is for the effective date of this
notice from August 1, 2023-July 31,2024.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
All importers of personal pet dogs (defined for the purpose of this
notice as owners or importers who are not importing for the purpose of
resale, rescue, or adoption and who are attempting to import fewer than
three dogs total between August 1, 2023-July 31, 2024) from DMRVV high-
risk countries are eligible to apply for a CDC Dog Import Permit.
Commercial dog importers (defined for the purpose of this notice as
importing three or more dogs during the suspension or those being
imported for resale, rescue, or adoption) are not eligible to apply for
a CDC Dog Import Permit and their dogs must meet the alternate pathway
requirements for entry outlined in Section V below.
Foreign-vaccinated dogs arriving from DMRVV high-risk countries
with a valid CDC Dog Import Permit will be allowed to enter the United
States if the dogs:
<bullet> Are six-months of age or older (photographs of the dog's
teeth are required for age verification);
<bullet> Have an ISO-compatible microchip;
<bullet> Have a CDC Rabies Vaccination and Microchip Record \118\
completed by the veterinarian who administered the rabies vaccine. The
record must state that the vaccine was administered on or after the
date the dog was 12 weeks (84 days) of age. The record must be in
English;
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\118\ Approved under OMB Control Number 0920-1383 Importation
Regulations (42 CFR 71 subpart F) (exp. 1/31/2026, or as revised).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
<bullet> Have serologic evidence of rabies vaccination (titer) from
an approved rabies serology laboratory \119\ (serologic titer results
>=0.5 IU/mL are required) with the sample collected at least 45 days
prior to entry and no greater than 365 days before entry; and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\119\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2022).
Approved Rabies Serology Laboratories for Testing Dogs. Retrieved
from <a href="https://www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/approved-labs.html">https://www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/approved-labs.html</a>.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
<bullet> Arrive at one of the 18 CDC-approved ports of entry with
CDC-staffed quarantine stations.
To apply for a CDC Dog Import Permit, importers whose dogs meet the
entry requirements listed above must submit the Application for Special
Exemption for a Permitted Dog Import.\120\
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\120\ Approved under OMB Control Number 0920-1383 Importation
Regulations (42 CFR 71 Subpart F) (exp. 1/31/2026, or as revised).
The permit application is available online at <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/dogpermit">www.cdc.gov/dogpermit</a>.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The importer's application, with all supporting documentation, must
be submitted at least 30 business days (i.e., excluding weekends and
U.S. Federal holidays) before the date on which the dog will enter the
United States. Importers may submit an application electronically at
<a href="http://www.cdc.gov/dogpermit">www.cdc.gov/dogpermit</a>. An application cannot be made at the port of
entry upon the dogs' arrival in the United States. Dogs that arrive
without a CDC Dog Import Permit will be returned to their country of
departure on the next available flight or if the dog meets the
requirements outlined in Section V, the dog may be quarantined at the
importer's expense at a CDC-approved animal care facility (if one is
located at the port of entry where the dog arrived) pending
availability and payment of all associated examination, revaccination,
and quarantine fees upfront.
Within 10 days of arrival, foreign-vaccinated dogs with a CDC Dog
Import Permit must receive a USDA-licensed rabies booster vaccination
administered by a U.S. veterinarian.
V. Conditions for Entry of Foreign-Vaccinated Dogs Without a CDC Dog
Import Permit During the Extension
CDC is continuing the requirements of the temporary suspension
published in the January 27, 2023, Federal Register notice \121\ that
provide an alternate pathway for importers of personally owned pets who
do not have a CDC Dog Import Permit and for commercial dog importers to
import dogs. While importers of commercial shipments of dogs cannot
apply for a CDC Dog Import Permit, a separate entry process, as
outlined below, has been established. All commercial dog importers from
DMRVV high-risk countries may import dogs provided that the dogs, upon
entering the United States, are examined, revaccinated, and have proof
of an adequate titer from a CDC-approved laboratory upon arrival or are
held in quarantine at a CDC-approved animal care facility until they
meet CDC entry requirements. Importers of personally owned pets may
also choose to use this pathway in lieu of obtaining a CDC Dog Import
Permit.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\121\ 88 FR 5348 (Jan. 27, 2023), effective February 1, 2023.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Foreign-vaccinated dogs without a valid CDC Dog Import Permit must
meet all of the following requirements:
<bullet> Dogs must enter at a port of entry with a CDC-approved
animal care facility; \122\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\122\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2022).
Bringing a dog into the United States. Retrieved from <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/dogtravel">www.cdc.gov/dogtravel</a>.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
<bullet> Dogs must be six months of age or older at the time of
entry;
<bullet> Dogs must have an ISO-compatible microchip; and
<bullet> Dogs must have a CDC Rabies Vaccination and Microchip
Record \123\ completed by the veterinarian who administered the rabies
vaccine. The record must be complete and state that the vaccine was
administered on or after the date the dog was 12 weeks (84 days) of
age. The record must be in English;
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\123\ Approved under OMB Control Number 0920-1383 Importation
Regulations (42 CFR 71 Subpart F) (exp. 1/31/2026, or as revised).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
<bullet> Importers must provide all required entry documents (CDC
Rabies Vaccination and Microchip Record, serologic titer results if
available, photos of dogs' teeth) to the CDC-approved animal care
facility at least 10 days before the dogs' arrival;
<bullet> Importers must arrange for an examination date and time
and reserve space with a CDC-approved animal care facility;
<bullet> Importers must arrange for transportation by a CBP-bonded
transporter (i.e., provided by the airline carrier or a CDC-approved
animal care facility) to a CDC-approved animal care facility
immediately upon the dogs' arrival to the United States; and
<bullet> Dogs must undergo veterinary examination and revaccination
against rabies at a CDC-approved animal care facility upon arrival at
the importer's expense.
Dogs must also be held at the CDC-approved animal care facility
until the following entry requirements are completed:
<bullet> Veterinary health examination by a USDA-accredited
veterinarian for signs of illness, including zoonotic or foreign
[[Page 43579]]
animal diseases. Suspected or confirmed zoonotic or foreign animal
diseases must be reported to CDC, USDA, the state or territorial public
health veterinarian, and the state or territorial veterinarian;
<bullet> The CDC-approved animal care facility must report all
signs of illness or parasitism to CDC and may not release the dog
without the written approval of CDC;
<bullet> Vaccination against rabies with a USDA-licensed rabies
vaccine and administered by a USDA-accredited veterinarian;
<bullet> Confirmation of microchip number;
<bullet> Confirmation of age through dental examination by a USDA-
accredited veterinarian; and
<bullet> Verification of adequate rabies titer from a CDC-approved
laboratory.\124\ Serologic titer results of >=0.5IU/mL are required
from a CDC-approved laboratory, with the sample collected at least 45
days prior to entry and no greater than 365 days before entry. Dogs
that arrive without documentation of an adequate rabies titer from an
approved laboratory must be housed at the CDC-approved animal care
facility for a 28-day quarantine at the expense of the importer
following administration of the U.S. rabies vaccine in addition to
meeting the criteria listed above. Dogs cannot be released from
quarantine unless all requirements have been met.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\124\ Approved laboratories can be found at: <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/approved-labs.html">www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/approved-labs.html</a>.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Importers are responsible for all fees associated with the
importation of dogs into the United States, including transportation,
examination, revaccination, and quarantine fees.
Foreign-vaccinated dogs arriving without a CDC Dog Import Permit
must enter the United States through a CDC-approved port of entry with
a CDC-approved animal care facility. As of May 1, 2023, these
facilities are located at: Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International
Airport, John F. Kennedy International Airport (New York), Los Angeles
International Airport, Miami International Airport, and Washington
Dulles International Airport (outside Washington, DC). Importers are
responsible for reserving examination times and space at the CDC-
approved animal care facility prior to arrival in the United States.
Dogs that arrive at unapproved ports of entry or without reservations
at a CDC-approved animal care facility will be denied entry and
returned to the country of departure.
VI. Continued Conditions for All Dogs From DMRVV High-Risk Countries
During the Extension
Consistent with the terms of the original temporary suspension
published in the June 16, 2021, Federal Register notice,\125\ all dogs
arriving from DMRVV high-risk countries must be microchipped prior to
arrival in the United States. The microchip can be administered in any
country and does not need to be a U.S.-issued microchip. The microchip
number must be listed on the CDC Rabies Vaccination and Microchip
Record or U.S.-issued rabies vaccination certificate. The microchip
must be ISO-compatible.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\125\ 86 FR 32041 (June 16, 2021), effective July 14, 2021.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Any dog from a DMRVV high-risk country not otherwise meeting the
requirements outlined in Sections III-V above will be excluded from
entering the United States and returned to its country of departure on
the next available flight, regardless of carrier or route, if the dog
arrives under any of the following circumstances:
<bullet> A dog arrives in the United States and does not meet the
minimum pre-arrival requirements (i.e., age greater than six months,
microchip, and either valid U.S.-issued rabies vaccination certificate
or complete and accurate CDC Rabies Vaccination and Microchip Record);
<bullet> A dog presented does not match the description of the
animal listed on the permit (if required), U.S. rabies vaccination
certificate, or CDC Rabies Vaccination and Microchip Record;
<bullet> A dog arrives at an unapproved port of entry;
<bullet> A dog arrives at an airport with a CDC-approved animal
care facility without a reservation and no space at the facility is
available; or
<bullet> Importer refuses transportation to, or receipt of, or
payment for services at, a CDC-approved animal care facility (if
required). CDC may consider the dog abandoned and transfer custody of
the dog to the airline carrier for final disposition.
The importer shall be financially responsible for all housing,
care, and return costs. If an importer abandons a dog while it is at a
CDC-approved animal care facility, the carrier shall become responsible
for all costs associated with the care, housing, and return of the dog
to the country of departure. In keeping with current practice,
importers should continue to check with Federal, state, and local
government officials regarding additional requirements of the final
destination prior to entry or re-entry into the United States.
VII. Additional Determinations Relating to This Notice
Pursuant to the terms of this notice, CDC is extending the
temporary suspension for the importation of dogs from DMRVV high-risk
countries. This suspension includes dogs originating in DMRVV low-risk
or DMRVV-free countries that have been in a DMRVV high-risk country in
the previous six months (not including animals transiting through DMRVV
high-risk countries).
To enter the United States, dogs imported from a DMRVV high-risk
country must meet certain entry requirements as described in Sections
III through V of this notice.
Table 1--Entry Conditions for Dogs Under Extended Temporary Suspension
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dogs with valid CDC
Dog ImportPermit Dogs with valid CDC Dogs with valid CDC
Dogs with valid U.S. rabies (fewer than three dogs Rabies Vaccination and Rabies Vaccination and
vaccination certificate (RVC) being imported with Microchip Record Microchip Record with
titer) without titer titer
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
At least six months of age........... At least six months of At least six months of At least six months of
age. age. age.
Microchip............................ Microchip.............. Microchip.............. Microchip.
Entry allowed at 18 ports of entry Entry allowed at 18 Entry allowed at five Entry allowed at five
with CDC quarantine station. ports of entry with ports of entry with ports of entry with
CDC quarantine station CDC-approved animal CDC-approved animal
with valid CDC Dog care facility. care facility.
Import Permit issued
prior to arrival.
Titer not needed..................... Serologic titer (>=0.5 Not applicable *....... Serologic titer (>=0.5
IU/mL) from a CDC- IU/mL) from a CDC-
approved laboratory. approved laboratory.
Titer drawn at least Titer drawn at least
45 days before entry 45 days before entry
and not more than 365 and not more than 365
days before entry. days before entry.
[[Page 43580]]
No quarantine........................ No quarantine.......... 28-day quarantine at No quarantine.
CDC-approved animal
care facility.
Veterinary exam, booster vaccination Veterinary exam or Veterinary examination, Veterinary examination,
or quarantine not required unless quarantine not booster vaccination, booster vaccination,
the animal appears ill upon arrival. required with valid and paperwork and paperwork
CDC Dog Import Permit verification at CDC- verification at CDC-
unless the animal approved animal care approved animal care
appears ill upon facility required upon facility required upon
arrival. Booster arrival. arrival.
vaccination is
required within 10
days of arrival by
U.S. veterinarian.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* This is an alternate pathway for importation in the event documentation of an adequate titer is not available
upon arrival.
The temporary suspension will continue to reduce the risk of
importation of DMRVV and ensure public health safeguards are in place
for the importation of dogs from DMRVV high-risk countries. The terms
of the temporary suspension allow for sufficient safeguards to mitigate
the public health risk. The temporary suspension will also allow CDC to
continue to work with Federal partners and the animal transportation
industry to implement more streamlined processes for verification of
vaccination records prior to travel. The proposed rule issued as a
companion document published elsewhere in this Federal Register
reflects these streamlined processes. CDC will also continue to
identify additional animal care facilities for the safe housing of
animals arriving at ports of entry. Most importantly, it will ensure
that U.S. public health remains protected.
Therefore, pursuant to 42 CFR 71.51and 42 CFR 71.63, CDC hereby
excludes the entry and suspends (subject to the terms and conditions
outlined in this notice) the importation of dogs from DMRVV high-risk
countries, including dogs from DMRVV low-risk and DMRVV-free countries
if the dogs have been present in a DMRVV high-risk country in the
previous six months.
Additionally, under 42 CFR 71.63, CDC continues to find that DMRVV
exists in countries designated as DMRVV high-risk countries and that,
if reintroduced into the United States, DMRVV would threaten the public
health of the United States. The continued entry of dogs from DMRVV
high-risk countries in the context of rabies vaccination campaign
disruptions and veterinary supply and veterinary workforce shortages as
a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as the insufficient
safeguards in place to prevent the exportation of inadequately
vaccinated dogs from DMRVV high-risk countries, further increases the
risk that DMRVV may be introduced, transmitted, or spread into the
United States. CDC has coordinated in advance with other Federal
agencies as necessary to implement and enforce this notice.
CDC further clarifies through this notice that there is no agency
policy of using the ``least restrictive means'' (as that concept is
typically understood and applied in cases involving interests protected
by the U.S. Constitution) in regard to animal importations under 42 CFR
part 71. ``The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment imposes
procedural constraints on governmental decisions that deprive
individuals of liberty or property interests.'' Nozzi v. Hous. Auth. Of
City of Los Angeles, 806 F.3d 1178, 1190 (9th Cir. 2015). However,
``[d]ue process protections extend only to deprivations of protected
interests.'' Shinault v. Hawks, 782 F.3d 1053, 1057 (9th Cir. 2015).
Because individuals have no protected property or liberty interest in
importing dogs into the United States, it is CDC's policy to not employ
a constitutional analysis of ``least restrictive means'' in regard to
animal imports under 42 CFR part 71. See Ganadera Ind. v. Block, 727
F.2d 1156, 1160 (D.C. Cir. 1984) (``no constitutionally-protected right
to import into the United States''); see also Arjay Assoc. v. Bush, 891
F.2d. 894, 896 (Fed. Cir. 1989) (``It is beyond cavil that no one has a
constitutional right to conduct foreign commerce in products excluded
by Congress.'').
Notwithstanding, to the extent that any court determines that an
analysis of ``least restrictive means'' is necessary, CDC finds and
asserts that the measures contained in this notice constitute the least
restrictive means of protecting the public's health from the
reintroduction of DMRVV. Although a complete ban on all dog imports
would arguably provide a greater level of public health protection, it
would deprive individuals of the many benefits arising from dog imports
including the companionship offered by pet dogs. Similarly, removing
all restrictions at this time (as has been explained in this notice)
would endanger the public's health and risk the reintroduction of DMRVV
based on, among other things, the high volume of imported dogs
contemporaneous with insufficient veterinary controls in DMRVV high-
risk countries to prevent the export of inadequately vaccinated dogs as
well as inadequate veterinary supply chains and persistent workforce
capacity shortages in DMRVV high-risk countries that export dogs to the
United States. Accordingly, in establishing the terms and conditions of
this notice, CDC has carefully balanced the need to protect the
public's health against the potential burden on importers and
determined that the measures in this notice constitute the least
restrictive means.
This notice is not a legislative rule within the meaning of the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), but rather a notice of an exclusion
and temporary suspension taken under the existing authority of 42 CFR
71.51(e) and 42 CFR 71.63, which were previously promulgated with full
notice and comment. If this notice qualifies as a legislative rule
under the APA, notice and comment and a delay in effective date are not
required because there is good cause to dispense with prior public
notice and the opportunity to comment on this notice. Considering the
high volume of imported dogs contemporaneous with insufficient
veterinary controls in DMRVV high-risk countries to prevent the export
of inadequately vaccinated dogs, inadequate veterinary supply chains,
and persistent workforce capacity shortages in DMRVV high-risk
countries that export dogs to the United States, it would be
impractical and contrary to the public's health, and by extension the
public's interest, to delay the issuance and effective date of this
notice. Notwithstanding, CDC is publishing this notice in advance of
its effective date, to assure potential dog importers and other
interested parties that the terms of the temporary suspension have not
changed, and therefore does not require
[[Page 43581]]
changes to their current operations and will remain in effect through
July 31, 2024.
CDC has further determined that good cause exists for a one-year
extension of the temporary suspension through July 31, 2024, to address
public health concerns regarding importation of dogs infected with
rabies. Moreover, in parallel to this notice announcing the extension
of the temporary suspension, CDC is proposing a rule revising entry
requirements to address these concerns regarding importation of rabid
dogs and fraudulent vaccination documentation. The proposed rule
outlines a framework and set of operations that would mitigate the need
for further extensions of the temporary suspension, should these
procedures be adopted. In consideration of both the anticipated needs
for global rabies vaccine campaigns to return to pre-pandemic levels
and to avoid disruption to importers' and the travel industry's
operations, CDC has determined that a one-year extension of the
temporary suspension through July 31, 2024, is required to protect the
public's health and is therefore in the public's interest. In the
absence of further extension of the temporary suspension, dog
importation requirements would return to procedures that proved
inadequate to prevent the import of rabid dogs into the United States.
A one-year extension provides time for CDC to continue to build a
robust dog importation system while global rabies vaccination efforts
continue to rebound. It will also avoid potential public confusion
regarding changing dog importation requirements and better address the
needs of importers, the animal care and transport industry, and Federal
partners who have indicated they would need time to adequately prepare
for any changes to their current operations. The proposed rule
published in parallel with this extension provides an opportunity for
public comment and input on any new procedures.
This temporary suspension will enter into effect on August 1, 2023,
and remain in effect through July 31, 2024, unless modified or
rescinded by the CDC Director based on public health or other
considerations.
Kathryn Wolff,
Chief of Staff, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2023-14342 Filed 7-6-23; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4163-18-P
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</html>This is legal information, not legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change frequently. Always verify current law with official sources and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice on your specific situation.