ProMed has a new list of recent rabies incidents. The whole report can be seen by clicking here, but these are some examples of common or important issues they touch on:
– Roaming pets + wildlife = bad news: One person’s dogs killed a raccoon while out for their "romp around the yard." The raccoon was rabid. There’s no mention about the vaccination status of the dogs. If they were vaccinated, they probably got a rabies booster and are under a 45-day "house arrest" for observation. If not, they either need to be placed under a strict 6-month quarantine at a separate facility, or they’ll be euthanized. Another report describes a different dog that is now under a 6-month quarantine after attacking a raccoon. In yet another report, a North Carolina woman’s dog was euthanized because it killed a rabid fox and was unvaccinated (the owner chose euthanasia over quarantine). That dog is now dead mainly because the owner didn’t take the simple and relatively inexpensive step of ensuring that her dog was vaccinated.
– Pissed-off wildlife bite. Sometimes they’re rabid too. Get too close at your own peril: A South Carolina man is undergoing post-exposure treatment because he was bitten by a raccoon while removing it from a trap. I’m glad that he had the animal tested. It’s pretty easy to see someone in a situation like this just yelling at the raccoon and letting it go, thinking they were bitten because the raccoon was upset and not realizing that they might have been exposed to rabies.
– Some people just don’t get it: In response to rabies exposure of close to 50 church members from a rabid bat while on a mission trip, the mission leader stated "It’s just part of being in rural America, so there’s really not a lot to talk about." Ugh. Rabies exposure should not be written off as some benign, unavoidable rural American experience. It’s exposure to an almost invariably fatal disease that requires a series of expensive treatments. It’s also not a rural thing. Rabies exposures can occur commonly in urban areas as well.
– Stray kittens can be cute but deadly: A rabid cat and kitten were identified in Ocean City, Maryland, and authorities are looking for people that may have come into contact with them. Human exposure to rabies from handling cute but infected kittens is not uncommon, and sometimes involves a lot of people. If you see a stray kitten, it’s best to leave it alone. If you feel the need to rescue it, make sure that you get it to a vet for an exam, and that it subsequently goes somewhere where it can be properly observed and taken care of. If you’re bitten in the process, make sure the kitten is quarantined for 10 days to see if it’s rabid, or euthanized and tested. The worse case scenario is when people play with stray kittens, get nipped in the process, dismiss it as a minor or playful bite, then release the kitten back into the wild, never knowing whether they might have been exposed to rabies.