||| FROM SAN JUAN COUNTY COMMUNICATIONS |||


A bat collected in San Juan County was recently sent for testing to the Washington State Public Health Lab and was determined to be positive for rabies. Treatment to prevent rabies was recommended for two individuals who were determined to have had potential exposure to the bat.

Rabies is a rare, but very serious animal-carried disease. It is a fatal disease in humans and some animals, but it is preventable if appropriate medical care is received after a potential rabies exposure. San Juan County Health & Community Services follows up on reports of potential rabies exposures to determine the risk to human health, which led to the testing of this bat.

Bats are important for our ecosystem in Washington; however, they can also carry rabies. In Washington, bats are the only known mammal to carry rabies with less than one percent of bats in the wild infected with rabies. However, all mammals are susceptible to rabies and rabies can be transmitted from infected bats to other mammals. Healthy bats typically avoid contact with people, and there is no reason to try to trap them. This will lead to unnecessary potential exposure.

You can prevent rabies by not touching or handling wild animals, especially bats.

For additional information:

https://doh.wa.gov/you-and-your-family/illness-and-disease-z/rabies

About San Juan County’s Department of Health and Community Services    

San Juan County’s Department of Health and Community Services is responsible for community and environmental health, mental health and substance abuse programs, senior services, affordable housing projects, and more. The department has staff and offices on Lopez, Orcas, and San Juan Islands. For more information about San Juan County’s Department of Health and Community Services, visit www.sanjuanco.com/1777/Health-Community-Services.


 

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