Title: Rabies Prevention
1Rabies Prevention Control in Montana
Jim Murphy, Health Specialist Montana
Department of Public Health and Human Services
Environmental Public Health Tracking 1400
Broadway, Cogswell Building Helena, MT
59620(406) 444-0273 jmurphy_at_state.mt.us
2High Risk Animals- Fox
In Montana Rare positives, two imports in recent
yrs. 41 foxes tested in 96-99 with 0 positives
3High Risk Animals- Bats
In Montana Frequent testers, 5- 10 From 96-
99 901 tested with 67 (7.5) positive
4High Risk Animals-Others
In Montana Skunks frequent , Raccoons
rare 96-99- 304 skunks, 122 (40), 134 raccoons
0
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6Relative Risks
- Risk depends on exposure
- Average 1-3 cases per year in US.
- v Two known in Montana Dec 96-Jan 97 both males
with bat-strains and no apparent exposure - More common in other parts of world (dog related)
- Lightning strikes and tornadoes kill 65-67 people
per year in U.S. - 48,366 people die annually in U.S. in
transportation related accidents
7Infectious Agent
- Viral
- Can not replicate outside of host.
- Fragile- does not survive well in the
environment, inactivated by - Sunlight
- Drying
- Heat
- Common disinfectants
- Several unique strains
8Transmission
v Rabies virus is found in saliva and other
infectious material (brain nerve tissue) only
at certain times during the course of the
illness. v In General The virus must enter the
body of a new host (inoculation) exposure does
not always result in infection.
9Transmission
Bites Non-Bites Scratches, abrasions, open
wounds, or mucous membranes contaminated with
infectious material Cornea/Organ transplants (9
on record) Airborne in Caves or Labs? Other
Human to Human transmission not reported.
10Transmission
Not transmitted by - air (maybe in caves?) -
petting a rabid animal - animal waste or
blood - eating tissues, milk?? - other objects
11Control Prevention
Reduce exposure - Wear gloves when working
around cracks/crevices Pre-exposure
vaccination - Recommended for lab workers, vets,
animal handlers others with frequent
contact with possible carriers. - Still need 2
shots after exposure Post-exposure
vaccination - One shot of HRIG around wound 5
shots of vaccine in arm at day 0, 3, 7, 14,
28. Regular exposure should have blood tests
and boosters as necessary.