Public Veterinary Medicine: Public Health Rabies surveillance in the United States

Summary—During 2007, 49 states and Puerto Rico reported 7,258 cases of rabies in animals and 1 case in a human to the CDC, representing a 4.6 % increase from the 6,940 cases in animals and 3 cases in humans reported in 2006. Approximately 93 % of the cases were in wildlife, and 7 % were in domestic...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jesse D. Blanton, Mph Dustyn Palmer, Ba Kira A. Christian
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.204.2266
http://www.avma.org/avmacollections/rabies/javma_233_6_884.pdf
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Summary:Summary—During 2007, 49 states and Puerto Rico reported 7,258 cases of rabies in animals and 1 case in a human to the CDC, representing a 4.6 % increase from the 6,940 cases in animals and 3 cases in humans reported in 2006. Approximately 93 % of the cases were in wildlife, and 7 % were in domestic animals. Relative contributions by the major animal groups were as follows: 2,659 raccoons (36.6%), 1,973 bats (27.2%), 1,478 skunks (20.4%), 489 foxes (6.7%), 274 cats (3.8%), 93 dogs (1.3%), and 57 cattle (0.8%). Compared with numbers of reported cases in 2006, cases in 2007 increased among dogs, bats, foxes, and skunks while decreases were reported among cattle, cats, and skunks. Increases in numbers of rabid raccoons during 2007 were reported by 11 of the 20 eastern states where raccoon rabies was enzootic, and reported cases increased by 1.7 % overall, compared with 2006. On a national level, the number of rabies cases in skunks during 2007 decreased by 1.1 % from the number reported in 2006. Texas reported the greatest number (n = 362) of rabid skunks and the greatest overall state total of animal rabies cases (969). No cases of rabies associated with the dog/coyote rabies virus variant were reported. The United States remains free of dog-to-dog transmission of canine rabies virus variants. The total number of cases of rabies reported nationally in foxes increased 14.5%, compared with 2006. Increases in the number of reported rabid foxes were attributable to greater numbers of foxes reported with the Arctic fox rabies virus variant in Alaska, the Texas gray fox rabies virus variant in Texas, and the raccoon rabies virus variant in Virginia. The 1,973 cases of