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Delaware Health and Social Services

DHSS Press Release

Date: July 24, 2003
DHSS-63-2003

Vincent P. Meconi, Secretary
Karryl McManus, Deputy Secretary
(302) 255-9047, Pager (302) 247-2116
Contact: Heidi Truschel-Light
Phone: (302) 744-4907
Pager: (302) 247-1560


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PUBLIC ADVISED TO REPORT CONTACT WITH RABID ANIMALS


Delaware's Division of Public Health (DPH) is investigating two recent exposures to rabid animals in Dover and Laurel. DPH advises anyone who may have come in contact with a cat at Lake Shore Village in Kent County or a raccoon in Laurel to immediately seek medical attention and notify DPH's rabies program at 302-744-4545.

A raccoon was found at the 100 block of East Sixth Street in Laurel July 18, where it bit a dog. The Delaware Public Health Laboratory (DPHL) confirmed the raccoon to be positive for rabies July 22. Anyone who handled a raccoon could be at risk for rabies and must receive medical treatment immediately to protect themselves.

An unvaccinated gray cat with a white front and no tail bit a person July 21 near Carrington Drive and Messina Hill Road south of Smyrna. The animal was confirmed to have rabies by DPHL July 23 and the person is receiving treatment. Contact with this cat could put individuals at risk for infection with this disease.

Rabies is a viral disease that attacks the nervous system and is usually fatal in humans without immediate treatment. The disease is spread when a rabid animal's saliva contacts another animal or human through wounds in the skin, typically a bite. Rabid animals in Delaware include raccoons, skunks, bats, groundhogs, foxes, cats and dogs.

The only treatment for rabies is a prompt dose of immune globulin and a series of five rabies vaccinations over a 28-day period. Treatment should begin as soon as possible after a suspected exposure to rabies. Current vaccinations are relatively painless and given in the arm.

DPH urges the public to take the following precautions against rabies:

  • Vaccinate all dogs and cats against rabies, according to law.
  • Children should not handle, feed, approach or play with wild animals.
  • Always walk your dog on a leash.
  • Do not allow your cats or dogs to roam free.
  • Keep garbage in tightly closed trashcans.

IF BITTEN BY AN ANIMAL:

  • Immediately wash bite wounds with plenty of soap and water.
  • Get prompt medical attention.
  • Get a description of the animal.
  • Do not try to capture the animal.
  • Report the bite to DPH's Rabies Program at 744-4545



Delaware Health and Social Services is committed to improving the quality of the lives of Delaware's citizens by promoting health and well-being, fostering self-sufficiency, and protecting vulnerable populations.

Last Updated: Thursday August 17 2006
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