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Health & Fitness

Make Sure Rabies Vaccines are Up to Date, Upcoming Clinics

Wild animals are reawakening and they're hungry! You and your pets are more likely to encounter wildlife, especially raccoons, so get your pet's rabies vaccine up to date.

The photo is from last autumn but I've seen several raccoons so far this spring which reminds me that hibernating wildlife is awakening, and they're hungry! Often the best food sources are near our homes since not much is growing yet in the woods, especially after this long winter.

It also reminds me that, with the reawakening of wild animals who share our backyards, neighborhoods and trails comes the risk of rabies—not that it's impossible in winter, it's only less likely with hibernation and difficulty getting around in winter conditions so we are far less likely to come in contact with warm-blooded wild animals, especially raccoons, the most common carriers of rabies.

The time I saw the raccoon in my yard was about 8:30 a.m. and the sun was fully up, which I consider daytime and not a time to see raccoons poking around in my back yard. I know raccoons have been around all the years I've lived here and my back yard is a popular hangout and cut-through. I hear them squealing at each other at night sounding as if they are in a death match, but that's just the way they talk to each other. The mom raccoon and her babies also visit my maple trees in the front yard, which are hollow and full of exciting and tasty insects. But in all these years I'd never seen one any earlier than deep dusk or just before first light.

Of course, the first thing I thought was rabies, though the raccoon was moving and acting normally. Raccoons are the most frequent carriers for rabies across the United States and the frequency in some areas is considered epidemic. Seeing one in the daytime is something to note. I've seen rabid raccoons, and this raccoon was acting nothing like it, so my second thought was that there was another reason for it to be out and about in full sun. On consulting with two wildlife two biologists I know it seems that wasn't so late in the day for a raccoon in the autumn and adding body fat was likely the reason, but I've been careful in my yard since then.

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About rabies

Rabies is a contagious viral disease termed zoonotic because it is one of the diseases which can spread from animals to humans with just one bite from an infected animal. A rabies vaccine is one of the basic set our pets get when young, and a booster is added at about one year for full immunity, though this immunity is only considered effective for a period of time, usually one to three years depending on the type of vaccine.

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If your pet bites a human and you can't provide the certificate of vaccination, your pet will be quarantined for ten days which  may be in your home or in a facility denoted by the agency issuing the law in your area—municipality or state. Though the rabies incubation period is typically three to eight weeks after the bite it can also take months to years before the symptoms begin to appear, but infected animals can only transmit the virus when clinical symptoms are present. Once symptoms appear the animal or human usually dies within five days. If the animal's rabies status isn't known at the time of the bite, ten days is enough time afterward to see if symptoms appear and the animal is diagnosed with rabies. If no symptoms appear, it's presumed the animal wasn't infected with rabies at the time of the bite.

The only way to test for rabies is by examination of the brain tissue of a dead animal. There is no way to test for rabies infection in a live animal.

Even if your pet doesn't go outdoors or only visits your yard or goes for walks on your street, encountering a rabid animal is still quite possible so check the status of your pet's rabies vaccine and have it updated if it's out of date now, before summer outings begin. A valid rabies vaccine is the law in every state in the United States and in Canada, though how and when the vaccine is administered may vary from one community to the next. I've provided a few links at the end of this article.

It's not so long ago that rabid animals, especially roaming dogs because they were pets who came into the home and were part of everyday life with humans, presented a great health peril in this country from infection with rabies. Many people died from the disease before treatment was available—a bite would transmit the disease to another animal or human, and without treatment both would die from the effects of the disease in very short order.

The rabies vaccine

But today in the United States we are fairly safe from this disease that is 100% preventable with a vaccine given to our pets, livestock, and even wild animals. Because the rabies vaccine is so commonly given to our pets we may take for granted that rabies is hardly a threat except for the occasional bat or raccoon or unfortunate stray dog or cat. Rabid dogs used to be common in the United States but since the vaccine was developed and is widely used for pets, the idea of our pets contracting rabies and turning against us is so horrible it became the inspiration for Stephen King's novel Cujo, and the description of rabies in the animals is quite real and factual.

This is one reason you'll see low-cost rabies clinics offered within communities for cats and dogs by shelters and rescue groups. 

Upcoming Clinics at Shelters in the Area

These clinics also offer other low-cost services such as microchipping and other regular vaccines. Please check the linked websites for more information and locations.

Western Pennsylvania Humane Society Low Cost Vaccine Clinic Sunday, May 18, 2014 at 10:00 a.m - 3 p.m

Animal Friends

Thursday, April 10th | 1pm - 3pm

Thursday, April 24th | 1pm - 3pm

Wednesday, May 14 | 1pm - 3pm

Thursday, May 29 | 1pm - 3pm

Washington Area Humane Society

RABIES & VACCINES CLINIC AT THE SHELTER
Date: Sunday, April 27, 2014
Hours:8 am- 12 pm

Also check the websites for the Animal Rescue League and Beaver County Humane Society for their upcoming clinics. Note that local veterinarians and pet supply stores also hold rabies clinics on a regular basis.

If you see a raccoon or other animal acting strangely

Raccoons are a little bolder than other wild creatures who may visit your yard—many are there all along but you never see them. Most of the time they just want to go about their business and continue looking for food and water especially if you maintain a backyard wildlife habitat—after all, you've invited them—but you may also have encounters with less social creatures. At this time of the year they are a little groggy but quite hungry waking up after their winter's nap. Through most of the year they are just looking for food, but in the spring they often have young ones hidden somewhere and parents tend to fiercely defend their young.

Unless you are trained in dealing with wildlife it's best to be cautious and if you feel threatened call your local wildlife agency for advice or assistance. Remember that wildlife is protected by state and federal laws and it's actually illegal to trap and keep, or trap and remove, a wild animal unless you have a license to do so. Be aware that when you call animal control in most communities, wild animals are usually not relocated to a new area, instead they are killed if they are considered . Check with your local animal control and animal shelters for their policies, and also find a resource for a wildlife professional who can help you with the situation.

And always keep your pets safe in these situations as well as yourself and your neighbors. Most wild animals will avoid an encounter, preferring to go about their daily activities. The places we live now were once their habitat as well.

We still need to be aware and be cautious despite the vaccines. Pennsylvania is always in the top 5 and in 2010 had the distinction of having the most reported cases of domestic rabies of all 50 states: between January 1 and May 30 of 2011, 114 raccoons, 18 skunks, 15 foxes and 12 cats tested positive for rabies in the state, according to an article in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. In June 2011, A dog tangled with a rabid raccoon on the Panhandle Trail. The dog was fine because he'd had his rabies vaccine. You can read a wealth of rabies statistics about Pennsylvania on the PA Department of Agriculture's website.

A current rabies vaccine for pets is the law in Pennsylvania, and in Allegheny County, the Health Department sets out baited food with the rabies vaccine for raccoons in areas they are known to travel, or those numbers might be even higher.

Rabies around the world

Other countries around the world are not so lucky as we are. More than 55,000 people still die every day from infection with rabies because the vaccine isn't available or isn't widely used, and worst of all, in countries where there is little or no humane law, available veterinary care or capacity for spaying and neutering pets, rabies prevention turns into mass round-ups and killings of dogs, especially, to prevent an outbreak. A recent New York Times article cited 20,000 people per year die from rabies in India alone because of the millions of stray dogs and laws based in Hindu beliefs against killing animals, The Global Alliance for Rabies Control in a collaborative project with the US Center for Disease Control (CDC) is working on a combined contraceptive and rabies vaccine for dogs and many other animals where rabies is frequent and safe spay and neuter is not readily available as well as a field test for rabies so that an animal does not need to be killed in order to be tested for the disease. Read about World Rabies Day to find out what's happening around the world.

Find rabies laws in your state or area, and more information on rabies

Administration of Rabies Vaccination State Laws from the American Veterinary Medical Association with a linked list of rabies laws throughout the United States.

Rabies Facts and Prevention Tips from the American Humane Association

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© 2014 | www.TheCreativeCat.net | Published by Bernadette E. Kazmarski

All images used in this article are copyrighted to Bernadette E. Kazmarski unless otherwise noted and may not be used without my written permission. 

Bernadette E. Kazmarski is an award-winning self-employed artist and writer, member of the Cat Writers' Association, Pittsburgh Society of Illustrators and South Hills Art League to name a few, completing print and web designs, illustrations and written articles and professional writing for a variety of customers as well as commissioned fine art and photography, combining a degree in English and a love of art, animals and nature to create logos, brochures, websites, portraits and paintings of the things we love and the world around us. Based in the South Hills of Pittsburgh you'll sometimes see her sketching or photographing along the Panhandle Trail or in Kane's Woods.

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