“…Taking into account that the annual canine rabies vaccination campaigns confer extraordinary value and dramatically reduce the health burden of rabies (Fitzpatrick et al, 2014;Hampson et al, 2009), vaccination is carried out annually in the province of Chucuito, the percentage of dogs vaccinated during the years evaluated varied greatly based on the estimated dog population, coinciding with that reported by Freire de Carvalho et al, (2018), keeping in the sustained safety range of 70-80% (Bourhy et al, 2008;Kuzmin et al, 2012;MINSA, 2006MINSA, , 2017; OIE, 2015;Sánchez-Soriano et al, 2020;Schneider et al, 2011;World Health Organization, 2013;Zinsstag et al, 2009), with the exception of the years 2007 to 2010, with the lowest coverage (table 2 and figure 9), but still well above the vaccination coverage reported by Kallo et al, (2020); coinciding with the efforts of LAC countries to maintain sustained efforts in the area of dog vaccination by providing an understanding of the baseline effort required to reduce the incidence of dog-mediated rabies (Freire de Carvalho et al, 2018), considering, that infection can be eliminated at source through sustained mass vaccination of reservoir populations (Hampson et al, 2009), doing mass vaccination should aim for coverage as high as possible (Zinsstag et al, 2009). Galán Torres (2012) recommends that the vaccination schedule should be unique, such recommendation in the country and the Puno region should be adopted in order to achieve more adequate coverage.…”