key: cord-0915042-zcy0q8zl authors: Smout, F.; Schrieber, L.; Speare, R.; Skerratt, L. F. title: More bark than bite: Comparative studies are needed to determine the importance of canine zoonoses in Aboriginal communities. A critical review of published research date: 2017-03-25 journal: Zoonoses Public Health DOI: 10.1111/zph.12354 sha: 63600f8b3d851a2f6fa426c0c034fa715c8b05ec doc_id: 915042 cord_uid: zcy0q8zl The objective of this review was to identify and critique over forty years of peer‐reviewed literature concerned with the transmission of canine zoonoses to Aboriginal people and determine the zoonotic organisms documented in dogs in Australian Aboriginal communities. A systematic literature search of public health, medical and veterinary databases identified 19 articles suitable for critical appraisal. Thirteen articles documented the occurrence of recognized zoonotic organisms in dogs in Aboriginal communities, including Toxocara canis, Dirofilaria immitis, Streptococcus dysgalactiae, Rickettsia felis, Sarcoptes scabiei and Giardia. Currently, there is definitive evidence indicating that dogs act as a reservoir for human scabies in Aboriginal communities. However, there is a need for large‐scale, high‐quality, comparative studies of dogs and humans from the same household to assess the occurrence and importance of transmission of S. scabiei and other diseases between dogs and humans. These studies should use current genetic and molecular techniques along with traditional techniques to identify and type organisms in order to better understand their epidemiology. This review has revealed that there is a lack of high‐quality comparative studies to determine whether dogs are contributing to human disease by transmitting zoonoses. Our recommendations differ significantly from current public health policy and may have substantial implications for human and dog health. Previous researchers have documented various zoonotic organisms being carried by community dogs resulting in the suggestion that dogs may play a role in the human disease burden (Currie, 1995; Shield, 1992; Wilks, 2000) . The effect of resultant dog health programmes on Aboriginal health has been the focus of considerable debate. The main concern is that Aboriginal health funding is redirected to dog health under the assumption that improving dog health will improve community health (Currie, 1995) . The debate was largely extinguished in the Northern Territory following the research conducted by Walton et al. (1999 Walton et al. ( , 2004 , that used microsatellite typing to show that scabies mites from dogs and humans group separately in a phylogenetic dichotomous tree which they suggested demonstrated separate transmission cycles. The ramifications of this have been that many communities are now under the impression that dogs pose no significant public health risks. Several reviews have been published trying to assess this risk, but none have explained their methods, nor critiqued the research using a specified system (Currie, 1995; Gaskin, Bentham, Cromar, & Fallowfield, 2007; Raw, 2001) . Zoonotic and public health literature reviews have been scrutinized for their lack of methodological soundness in review techniques, because they are more likely to contain bias or errors (Waddell et al., 2009 ). Therefore, despite over 40 years of research, we present here the first critical review of canine zoonoses in Australian Aboriginal communities, using a systematic methodology. The aim of this study was to provide the public health audience with a summary of zoonotic organisms that have been found in dogs and humans within Aboriginal Australian communities, their zoonotic potential and their importance to the human disease burden based on evidence and methodological soundness. Through this review, we better assess the public health risks that dogs pose in Aboriginal Australian communities. We identify directions for future high-quality, evidence-based research to address current gaps in knowledge. Our recommendations differ significantly from current public health policy and have substantial implications for human and dog health. A database search of several public health, medical and veterinary databases including Medline, Web of Science, Embase, Scopus, Biosis reviews, APAIS Health, CINAHL, Zoological record, CABI Abstracts, EBM Reviews was undertaken using combinations of the words, "zoonoses" OR "zoonotic" OR "disease" OR "parasites" AND "dogs" AND "Australia" AND "Aboriginal". Frequent authors were also searched, and searches through the reference lists of eligible papers were also studied and included if eligible. Database searches returned 43 articles, and a further nine articles were retrieved by studying the reference lists of all papers and searching for common authors. Of these, 19 articles were eligible for inclusion. These articles have been summarized in Appendix S1. Only articles that were consistent with the aim and were published in peerreviewed journals were eligible for inclusion ( Figure 1 ). A checklist was developed and papers excluded if: 1. They did not contain any zoonotic information pertaining to dogs (or did not distinguish between companion animals). They did not contain any information about an organism recognized as a zoonosis. (However, research was included if the organism's ability to cause disease in humans was still unknown). The main aim was to test the efficiency of a microbiological technique. They did not describe their methods of research. They did not specify whether the research pertained to Aboriginal people or dogs from their communities (or a location commonly known as an Aboriginal community). Appendix S2 illustrates how included articles were critiqued using the Crowe Critical Appraisal Tool (CCAT) (Crowe & Sheppard, 2011) . Briefly, the CCAT is an appraisal tool that allows reviewers to evaluate a paper by dividing it into categories and scoring each category out of five based on descriptors. There are a total of eight categories; 1. Preamble (Title, Abstract and text overall). 3. Design (Research design, measure, bias). Sampling (method, size, protocol). Data collection (method, protocol). 7. Results (analysis, integration, interpretation, outcome). 8. Discussion (interpretation, generalization, conclusion). • This critical review of over 40 years of published research reveals a lack of high-quality comparative studies to determine whether dogs are contributing to human disease in Aboriginal communities. • The aim of this study was to provide the public health audience with a summary of zoonotic organisms that have been found in dogs and humans within Aboriginal Australian communities. • A better understanding of the epidemiology of zoonotic diseases is essential to direct health care funding where it is most needed Two reviewers used the Crowe critical appraisal tool to systematically summarize the strengths and weaknesses of each study by following the above criteria. Reference was made to Dohoo, Martin, and Stryhn (2003) and Lewis-Beck, Bryman, and Liao (2004) for information regarding sampling and research design. Ethics approval was not required for this review as there was no human or animal intervention. The authors state there are no conflict of interests or funding sources to be declared. The majority of research in this area is not recent (i.e. many papers with large sample sizes were published before 1994). Most studies were opportunistic, had small sample sizes and did not compare pathogens in humans with those in dogs. The few comparative studies almost never compared dogs and people from the same household. Furthermore, the pathogenicity of many of the organisms found has not been determined. Of the 19 papers included in the review, six were short contributions (Hii et al., 2011; Jenkins & Andrew, 1993; Lee & Hampson, 1996; Meloni, Lymbery, Thompson, & Gracey, 1988; Thompson, Meloni, Hopkins, Deplazes, & Reynoldson, 1993) . We did not find any eligible papers prior to 1974 with the bulk of studies undertaken between 1990 and 2000. Papers were published in medical, veterinary, public health and parasitology journals. The majority were in medical journals; however, after 2000, this shifted to parasitology. Four papers determined the prevalence of a wide range of parasites (Jenkins & Andrew, 1993; Meloni, Thompson, Hopkins, Reynoldson, & Gracey, 1993; Shield et al., 2015; Thompson, Meloni, et al., 1993) . The remaining 15 papers targeted 12 zoonotic organisms (Table 1) . Two reviewers using CCAT appraisal methods were often in agreement on scores and differed by only 1 or 2 points occasionally (See Appendix S2 for averaged results). Most papers received a low score for design, sampling, data collection and ethical matters. Only five of 19 articles described the research design of the study albeit briefly (Hopkins et al., 1997; Meloni et al., 1993; Schrieber, Towers, Muscatello, & Speare, 2014; Walton et al., 1999 Walton et al., , 2004 . Five were purely observational and documented the presence of zoonotic organisms in dogs only (Hii et al., 2011; Jenkins & Andrew, 1993; Lee & Hampson, 1996; Palmer et al., 2007; Thompson, Meloni, et al., 1993) . Thirteen also examined samples from humans to see whether disease transmission had occurred. The most renowned comparative studies conducted on possible transfer of zoonotic organisms from dogs to people in Aboriginal communities are those of Walton et al. (1999 Walton et al. ( , 2004 . The studies included a large number of scabies mites but a limited number of hosts, 16 people and 17 dogs. Within-household comparisons were only applicable to mites from a four-week-old baby and three puppies. The results of these studies are discussed further on in this paper. Welch and Dobson (1974a) Queensland were found to have lesions in the same year, but it is unknown whether they were the same individuals who participated in the study. Regardless, the prevalence of canine dirofilariasis significantly correlated with the mean titre of individuals testing positive to anti-D. immitis antibodies, indicating that D. immitis prevalence in dogs will increase a person's exposure. Lee and Hampson (1992) found that Aboriginal people from various communities in the Kimberley area had intestinal spirochaetal bacteria in their faeces. In addition, another study of dogs from Fitzroy Crossing and Jarvis Bay were also found to have morphologically similar spirochaetes in their faeces to humans (Lee & Hampson, 1996) . Multilocus enzyme electrophoresis of spirochaetes isolated from a dog with diarrhoea was closely related genetically to spirochaetes recovered from Aboriginal children with whom the dog lived (Lee & Hampson, 1994) . Kaminski and Green (1977) conducted a large-scale study on the prevalence of Tinea capitis in Aboriginal communities. In the community of Maningrida, they found that 25.3% of children with tinea capitis were due to the "Maningrida" type variant of Microsporum canis. This variant was also found in four cats and two dogs in the community. The only other study we could find that conducted comparative studies on potentially zoonotic organisms isolated from dogs and people in Aboriginal communities was that of Schnagl, Holmes, & Mackay-Scollay, 1978) The sample sizes for five papers Shield et al., 2015; Thompson, Meloni, et al., 1993; Welch & Dobson, 1974b; Welch, Dobson, & Freeman, 1979) were considerable, providing precise estimates of prevalence in dogs in the Kimberley region Thompson, Meloni, et al., 1993) , various locations around Queensland (Welch & Dobson, 1974b) , Central Australia (Welch et al., 1979) and Arnhem Land (Shield et al., 2015) . Two papers were from the same study, although considered different organisms Thompson, Meloni, et al., 1993) . The prevalence of Toxocara canis and Dirofilaria immitis differed markedly among locations, highlighting the need for dog control and education programmes to be targeted towards the risks faced by each community. T A B L E 1 Number of published papers according to zoonotic organism and symptoms recorded in people The study by Jenkins and Andrew (1993) Fourteen papers published from 1974 to 2007 did not discuss ethical approval of their study; nine of these included the use of human data. Only seven of 19 papers scored any points in the ethical matters category. Only two papers discussed the use of informed consent when taking samples from Aboriginal people and their dogs (Schrieber et al., 2014; Walton et al., 1999) . Many papers thanked nurses and participants, and two papers recognized the support of the community council (Jenkins & Andrew, 1993; Welch et al., 1979) . While informed consent is not mentioned in many of the papers, it may still have been received. Regardless, papers should clearly state the ethical procedures undertaken within Aboriginal communities whether samples are coming from humans or their dogs. Walton et al. (1999) stated that the human-derived scabies mites and the dog-derived scabies mites in the same Aboriginal community had different transmission cycles based on them grouping in separate clusters within a phylogenetic dichotomous tree. However, a re-analysis of the data using reticulated networks rather than dichotomous trees to represent the evolutionary history of S. scabiei in the Aboriginal community showed that both human-to-human and dog-to-human transmission cycles occur and that both are important for control programmes (Morrison, 2005) . Therefore, the method of analysis can significantly affect interpretation of results. In this case, failure to consider reticulate evolution led to an important zoonotic transmission pathway being overlooked. The continuing health disparities seen between Indigenous and non- Trichophyton rubrum was reported to be responsible for the most common endemic ringworm cases (Green & Kaminski, 1973; Koh et al., 2003) . Kaminski and Green (1977) Scabies is a debilitating skin condition in Aboriginal communities caused by the mite Sarcoptes scabiei. It is important because the resultant trauma to the skin can lead to subsequent bacterial infection. In some Aboriginal communities, scabies has been shown to underlie up to 70% of streptococcal pyoderma (Currie & Carapetis, 2000) . Dog-derived scabies mites have been experimentally shown to burrow, lay eggs and defecate in human skin initiating papular lesions (Estes, Kummel, & Arlian, 1983 ). Smith and Claypoole (1967) The studies conducted by Walton et al. (1999 Walton et al. ( , 2004 have been used as evidence of a lack of zoonotic transmission of the scabies mite. However, re-analysis of the data using more appropriate methods showed that dog-to-human transmission occurred multiple times and was an important component of the epidemiology of human scabies (Morrison, 2005) . Given this and the above evidence from other studies, the conclusions of Walton et al. (1999 Walton et al. ( , 2004 that "control programmes for human scabies in endemic areas do not require resources directed against zoonotic infection from dogs," are incorrect. Successful mitigation of the effects of scabies in Aboriginal communities must include the control of sarcoptic mange in dogs. (Narine, Brennan, Gilfillan, & Hodge, 1999) . These pulmonary nodules have been mistaken for tuberculosis and metastatic tumours (Narine et al., 1999; Ro et al., 1989) . Aboriginal people have extremely high rates of tuberculosis with 6.2 cases per 100,000 population in 2008 versus 0.9 cases per 100,000 population of non-Indigenous people born in Australia (Barry, Waring, Stapledon, & Konstantinos, 2012) . In 1974, Welch and Dobson (1974b) (Welch & Dobson, 1974b ). Although classically associated with ocular and visceral larva migrans, Toxocara infection is now known to manifest more commonly as non-classic or covert toxocariasis where clinical signs include wheezing and asthma, pulmonary infiltrates and eosinophilia (Feldman & Parker, 1992; Sharghi, Schantz, & Hotez, 2000) . Welch et al. (1979) reported T. canis in about 75% of dogs from most areas in Queensland. Although a recent national study found a low prevalence of T. canis in domestic dogs in veterinary clinics and refuges (1.2%) (Palmer, Thompson, Traub, Rees, & Robertson, 2008) , a recent wild dog survey, which may better reflect the zoonotic risk from free-ranging community dogs, reported prevalences of 46% (Smout, Thompson, & Skerratt, 2013) . Mizgajska (2001) concluded that the prevalence of human toxocariasis is proportional to soil contamination with infective eggs of Toxocara spp. Shield et al. (2015) found 21% of people seropositive for T. canis in their studies in Arnhem Land in the mid 1990s. Toxocariasis is now being heralded as the most common human parasitic worm infection in the United States, and with its high prevalence in developing countries, it is considered that its global importance may be greatly underestimated (Hotez & Wilkins, 2009 ). Giardia duodenalis (syn Giardia intestinalis; G. lamblia) is the most common intestinal parasite of humans in developed countries (Thompson, 2000) . The highly variable symptoms of giardiasis include persistent diarrhoea, abdominal pain and rapid weight loss . It is now commonly thought that although dogs can carry strains of Giardia which are potentially infective to humans, transmission mainly occurs among humans (Hopkins et al., 1997; Robertson & Thompson, 2002) . In support of this Hopkins et al. (1997) found differences in genotypes of Giardia isolated from 13 Aboriginal people from Fitzroy Crossing and nine dogs that had been culled from the same area. They found that the samples separated into four different genetic groups. All of the human and three dog isolates were contained in groups 1 and 2, while groups 3 and 4 consisted entirely of Giardia samples from dogs. In contrast, Traub et al. (2004) studied zoonotic Giardia transmission in a remote community in India and found that Giardia isolates derived from dogs were placed within the human genetic groupings. Furthermore, humans residing in a house that owned dogs and where one dog was infected with Giardia were significantly more likely to be infected, than humans that did not have a dog or a dog infected with Giardia. In addition, genetically identical isolates were found in dogs and humans from the same household in two cases. Together, these are taken as strong evidence in support of the potential for zoonotic transmission. The contrasting results seen between the Aboriginal and the Indian communities may be because dogs from Aboriginal communities experience a higher level of interaction with other dogs and have less opportunity to eat human faeces (Traub et al., 2004) . Giardia isolates are prone to competitive exclusion, enabling selection of hostspecific Giardia assemblages (Thompson, 2000) . It is also possible that the source of dog samples within the Aboriginal study is biased and may therefore be masking zoonotic transmission. According to Hopkins et al. (1997) , the dog isolates used in the study were retrieved from culled dogs from the same area as the human participants (n = 9). However, there is nothing to suggest that the dogs used in the study were from the same household as human participants or that the dogs were owned by anyone. Generally, dogs that are euthanased by councils are unhealthy, stray dogs. Sampling from the stray/wild dog population might bias the result because the major form of Giardia transmission, dog to dog, would predominately select for dog-specific Giardia assemblages. Further research is required to ascertain the potential and frequency of zoonotic transmission of Giardia from dogs to their owners in Aboriginal communities. Palmer et al. (2007) investigated the public health significance of hookworms in Australia and found that Ancylostoma caninum, the dog hookworm, had the highest prevalence (14%) in Aboriginal communities. It is interesting to note that with such a high incidence of A. caninum in communities, we did not recover any reports of eosinophilic enteritis. An Australian study implicated A. caninum as the leading cause of human eosinophilic enteritis (Prociv & Croese, 1990) . Aboriginal communities. The detection of Ancylostoma ceylanicum for the first time in Australia in 10.9% of domestic dogs found positive for hookworm (Palmer et al., 2007) and in Australian wild dogs (Smout et al., 2013) warrants further investigation given this parasite's potential to infect dogs and cats and cause a patent infection in humans (Inpankaew et al., 2014; Ngui, Lim, Traub, Mahmud, & Mistam, 2012 R. felis, the agent of fleaborne spotted fever in humans, is typically transmitted through the bite of an infected cat flea (Ctenocephalides felis). Clinical infection ranges from fever, headaches, chills, muscle aches, joint pain and possible eschar at the bite site to a more severe, multisystemic disease as a result of a widespread vasculitis (Maina et al., 2012; Teoh et al., 2016) . Molecular techniques have been used to identify R. felis infection in cat fleas from multiple sites in Western Australia (Schloderer, Owen, Clark, Stenos, & Fenwick, 2006) . Williams, Izzard, Graves, Stenos, and Kelly (2011) reported R. felis infection in two adults and three children from Victoria. Previously, many infections in Australia may have been misdiagnosed as murine typhus as serological diagnosis was not specific and was typically confounded by cross-reactivity with typhus group rickettsiae (Teoh et al., 2016) . Dogs are often infested with cat fleas, and infected dogs can appear physically healthy, which may be characteristic of reservoir hosts of R. felis (Hii et al., 2011) . Further study is needed to determine the pathogenicity of this infection in dogs. reported that coronavirus-like particles were equally prevalent in humans with or without symptoms of diarrhoea. The proportion of children who excreted the viral particles increased with age. Viruses found in humans and dogs were indistinguishable morphologically . The authors concluded that given there are few reports of canine enteric coronaviruses it is difficult to gauge how widespread and important they are, not only as a health risk to dogs, but also to humans . Lee and Hampson (1992 , 1994 , 1996 investigated intestinal spirochaetes in faecal samples of humans, pigs and dogs. Although they are found more commonly when diarrhoea is present, their pathogenicity is still largely unknown. Spirochaetes are possibly commensal organisms of the intestine that are flushed out during bouts of diarrhoea (Leach, Lee, & Stubbs, 1973) . Therefore, it is unknown what impact spirochaetes may have on Aboriginal health. Schrieber et al. (2014) identified an identical strain of SDSE from pharyngeal swabs of a child and dog from the same household. Once considered a commensal organism, recent studies have shown that through horizontal gene transfer SDSE may be gaining virulence genes from Streptococcus pyogenes, thus elevating its potential importance as a human pathogen (Brandt & Spellerberg, 2009 ). Identifying all factors including those of the shared environment that may or may not contribute to disease is extremely important to the improvement of health outcomes for Aboriginal Australians. This review has revealed that there have not been enough high-quality comparative studies to determine whether dogs are contributing significantly to the disease burden of Aboriginal communities by transmitting zoonoses. Aboriginal health researchers have expressed concern that further research into canine zoonoses may result in government funding being shifted from child health to fund dog health programmes, irrespective of the evidence of whether it will substantially benefit the health of Aboriginal children (Currie, 1995) . It is outside the scope of this paper to predict future funding decisions and distribution of resources. However, we believe that we have shown that there is insufficient scientific evidence to prove that zoonotic transmission is not important. Current public health approaches to helminth infections are directed at investigating anthroponotic routes of infection (Crompton, Montresor, Nesheim, & Savioli, 2003) . Whereas addressing zoonotic origins may be more appropriate. Identification of human parasitic infections such as Trichuris trichiura using egg morphology alone may be inadequate and may have previously led to cases of misidentification due to morphological similarity to T. vulpis (Dunn, Columbus, Aldeen, Davis, & Carroll, 2002) . The recent findings of A. ceylanicum in dogs (Palmer et al., 2007) , dingoes (Smout et al., 2013) and humans (Koehler et al., 2013) in Australia should ensure caution is used when diagnosing infections such as A. duodenale in humans. The development of advanced, PCR-based techniques allows for differentiation between hookworm species using DNA isolated from eggs in faeces and soil (Traub, Inpankaew, Sutthikornchai, Sukthana, & Thompson, 2008) and enables a better understanding of the epidemiology of A. ceylanicum infection (Smout et al., 2013) . To achieve the most from further research, it would be wise to invest time in the Aboriginal community, communicate with relevant community groups and workers and employ Aboriginal locals (such as the animal management worker) on the project team. The establishment of early contact with community based health services can result in collaboration with Aboriginal health workers and other research projects that may already be underway in the community. It is extremely important to conduct comparative studies using samples from dogs and humans from the same household, along with samples from the stray/wild dog population. Samples from both necropsied and live animals would be ideal. And finally, it is imperative that results are published in peer-reviewed journals for the benefit of everyone involved, present and future. Working Group for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Environmental Health (ed.) 7th National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Environmental Health Conference Sarcoptic mange: A zoonotic ectoparasitic skin disease Tuberculosis notifications in Australia Human infections due to Streptococcus dysgalactiae subspecies equisimilis Reproduction in captive and wild dingoes (Canis familiaris dingo) in temperate and arid environments of Australia Healing the hand that feeds you: Exploring solutions for dog and community health and welfare in Australian Indigenous Cultures The dingo in Australia and Asia Controlling disease due to helminth infections A review of critical appraisal tools show they lack rigor: Alternative tool structure is proposed Dogs and human health in Aboriginal communities: How important are zoonoses? Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Information Bulletin Skin infections and infestations in Aboriginal communities in northern Australia Veterinary epidemiologic research Trichuris vulpis recovered from a patient with chronic diarrhea and five dogs A review of the history and aims of dog health programs in Australia Experimental canine scabies in humans Visceral larva migrans associated with the hypereosinophilic syndrome and the onset of severe asthma The Zoonotic potential of dogs in Aboriginal communities in Central Australia Trichophyton rubrum infections in Northern Territory Aborigines Molecular evidence of Rickettsia felis infection in dogs from northern territory Ribosomal RNA sequencing reveals differences between the genotypes of Giardia isolates recovered from humans and dogs living in the same locality Toxocariasis: America's most common neglected infection of poverty and a helminthiasis of global importance? Post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis is a strong risk factor for chronic kidney disease in later life High prevalence of Ancylostoma ceylanicum hookworm infections in humans Intestinal parasites in dogs from an aboriginal community in New South Wales Tinea capitis in Aboriginal Children at Maningrida, Northern Territory Genetic characterization of selected parasites from people with histories of gastrointestinal disorders using a mutation scanning-coupled approach Use of terbinafine for tinea in Australian Aboriginal communities in the Top End Localization of bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract: A possible explanation of intestinal spirochaetosis Intestinal spirochaetes colonizing aborigines from communities in the remote north of Western Australia Genetic characterisation of intestinal spirochaetes and their association with disease The prevalence of intestinal spirochaetes in dogs The Sage encyclopedia of social science research methods Rickettsia fells infection in febrile patients The association between Australian Aborigines and dingoes High prevalence of Giardia lamblia in children from a WA aboriginal community The prevalence of Giardia and other intestinal parasites in children, dogs and cats from aboriginal communities in the Kimberley Eggs of Toxocara spp. in the environment and their public health implications Networks in phylogenetic analysis: New tools for population biology Pulmonary presentation of Dirofilaria immitis (canine heartworm) in man Epidemiological and genetic data supporting the transmission of ancylostoma ceylanicum among human and domestic animals National study of the gastrointestinal parasites of dogs and cats in Australia The veterinary and public health significance of hookworm in dogs and cats in Australia and the status of A. ceylanicum Direct characterization of Blastocystis from faeces by PCR and evidence of zoonotic potential Human eosinophilic enteritis caused by dog hookworm Ancylostoma caninum. The Lancet Rural and remote environmental health 1. Brisbane: The Australasian College of Tropical Medicine Pulmonary dirofilariasis: The great imitator of primary or metastatic lung tumor Enteric parasitic zoonoses of domesticated dogs and cats Rickettsia felis in fleas Coronavirus-like particles in stools from dogs, from some country areas of Australia. The Veterinary Record Coronavirus-like particles in Aboriginals and non-Aboriginals in Western Australia Transmission of Streptococcus dysgalactiae subsp. equisimilis between child and dog in an Aboriginal Australian community Toxocariasis: An occult cause of childhood neuropsychological deficits and asthma? In: Seminars in pediatric infectious diseases Some problems of dog health and control in Aboriginal and Islander Communities in North Queensland Intestinal parasites of children and adults in a remote Aboriginal community of the Northern Territory Canine scabies in dogs and in humans Dingoes (Canis dingo Meyer, 1793) continue to be an important reservoir host of Dirofilaria immitis in low density housing areas in Australia First report of Ancylostoma ceylanicum in wild canids Evidence of exposure to Rickettsia felis in Australian patients Giardiasis as a re-emerging infectious disease and its zoonotic potential Observations on the endo and ectoparasites affecting dogs and cats in Aboriginal communities in the north west of Western Australia Giardia and giardiasis PCR-based coprodiagnostic tools reveal dogs as reservoirs of zoonotic ancylostomiasis caused by Ancylostoma ceylanicum in temple communities in Bangkok Epidemiological and molecular evidence supports the zoonotic transmission of Giardia among humans and dogs living in the same community The methodological soundness of literature reviews addressing three potential zoonotic public health issues Genetically distinct dog-derived and human-derived Sarcoptes scabiei in scabies-endemic communities in northern Australia Genetic epidemiology of Sarcoptes scabiei (Acari: Sarcoptidae) in northern Australia Antibodies to Dirofilaria Immitis in Causasian and Aboriginal Australians diagnosed by immunofluorescence and passive arthus hypersensitivity The prevalence of antibodies to Dirofilaria immitis in aboriginal and caucasian Australians Distribution and diagnosis of dirofilariasis and toxocariasis in Australia Sustainable Dog Health Programs Are Possible: West Australian Experiences in Remote Management and Service Delivery The dog health program in Aboriginal communities-a method for dog management in remote Aboriginal communities First probable Australian cases of human infection with Rickettsia felis (catflea typhus) Additional Supporting Information may be found online in the supporting information tab for this article.