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Dateline: September
4,
2008
Fall
brings higher rabies risk
Many Texans continue to enjoy outdoor
activities into the late summer and early fall days,but Texas Department
of State Health Services (DSHS) health officials warn that September and
October often have the highest number of laboratory-confirmed rabies
cases.
Lat year, 114 rabies
cases were reported in September, 93 of those in bats. The only month with
a higher total was March with 116 cases out of 969 cases for the year. In
2006, 120 rabies cases were reported in September and another 109 cases in
October, most in bats.
While these numbers
can be eye-opening, DSHS health officials say there are things that you
can do to keep from being exposed to the rabies virus.
“The most important
thing that people can do is to have their animals vaccinated against
rabies and keep those vaccinations up to date,” said Dr. Tom Sidwa, DSHS
veterinarian who heads the department’s Zoonosis Control Branch.
“State law requires that you have your dogs and cats vaccinated against
rabies by a veterinarian.”
DSHS also offers this
advice:
Keep cats and ferrets
indoors, and keep dogs indoors or in a fenced yard.
Spray or neuter pets
to prevent unwanted animals that may not receive proper care.
Teach children not to
play with any animal that they do not know, even if the animal seems
friendly.
Avoid animals, both
domestic and wild, that appear disoriented, fearless or aggressive.
Nighttime animals such as bats, raccoons, and skunks that are active in
the daytime may be sick.
Do not touch any wild
animal that appears ill or dead. Call your local animal control or local
health department for help.
Don’t attract wild
animals to your yard. Avoid leaving pet food outdoors, and keep garbage in
closed containers.
Stay away from wild
animals, and never keep a wild animal as a pet.
Prevent bats from
entering the home where they might come in contact with people or pets.
You cannot, however, get rabies just from seeing a bat from a distance.
If you find a bat in
a room with an unattended child, a sleeping person, or anyone who cannot
reliably say what happened, leave the room, close the door, and call your
local rabies control or local health department to capture the bat and
have it tested for rabies. Do not touch the bat yourself.
Have domestic
ferrets, wolf-dog hybrids, and livestock, especially those that are in
frequent cintact with humans, vaccinated against rabies.
Rabies is a viral
illness that affects the central nervous system. Once symptoms of rabies
occur, it is almost always fatal. However, a series of post-exposure
shots, if given in time, can prevent rabies from developing.
Humans and all
warm-blooded animals can get rabies. You can be infected with the rabies
virus through the bite of an infected animal. Though rare, you can also
get rabies if the saliva of an infected animal gets directly into your
nose, eyes, mouth, or a fresh wound.
Rabies is a medical
urgency not an emergency, but decisions must not be delayed. If you or
someone in your family is bitten, DSHS recommends that you:
Wash the wound
immediately and thoroughly with soap and warm water. Apply an antiseptic
if available.
Seek prompt medical
care if an animal bites you, or you believe that you may have been exposed
to rabies.
Your health care
provider will determine if a series of rabies shots is needed. Report all
animal bites to your local rabies control authority as soon as possible so
the animal can be quarantined or tested if needed. Be able to describe the
kind of animal, its size, and color as completely as possible if it has
not already been captured.
High-risk animals for
rabies in Texas are skunks, bats, raccoons, foxes, and coyotes. Rabbits,
hares and small rodents such as squirrels, rats, mice, hamsters, guinea
pigs, gerbils and chipmunks are rarely found to be infected with rabies
and have not been known to cause rabies in humans in the United States.
Dogs, cats, horses, and cattle are the most frequently reported rabid
domestic animals in Texas.
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