Rabies in New York City in 2014
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"You're crazy Dr. Plotnick!" |
The news is: there was a big drop in rabies cases. For the entire year 2014, twelve animals tested positive for rabies. They were 10 raccoons, 1 skunk, and 1 opossum. Six raccoons and the skunk were from Staten Island, and 4 raccoons and the opossum were from Brooklyn. That’s a very big drop for Staten Island. In 2013, there were 49 rabid animals reported. Last year, it was only 7. There were no rabid animals in Queens, for the fourth year in a row. The Bronx almost always has one or two rabid animals reported, but in 2014, there were none reported. That’s the first time that’s happened since 1996.
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Anyway… here are the 2014 stats:
Bronx: 51 animals tested (23 raccoons, 11 cats, 7 dogs, 5 bats, 2 skunks, 3 opossums). All negative.
Manhattan: 48 animals tested (18 cats, 10 raccoons, 8 bats, 7 dogs, 2 skunks, 3 “other”). All negative.
Queens: 138 animals tested (73 raccoons, 35 opossums, 14 cats, 8 dogs, 7 bats, 1 skunk). All negative.
Staten Island: 50 animals tested (19 raccoons, 12 cats, 5 dogs, 5 opossums, 3 bats, 3 groundhogs, 1skunk, 2 “other”). Seven positives (6 raccoons and 1 skunk).
I’m sure you’re curious about the “other” category. They include 1 rabbit, 4 squirrels, 1 gopher, and 1 mouse.
So, 2014 was a pretty good year. If you look at the cumulative data from the past 22 years (1992 to 2014), you can see that the percentage of positives is pretty low. 15004 animals were tested, and 638 came up positive. That’s 4.3%. Again, of the 638 animals that have tested positive over the past 22 years, there have been zero dogs and only 14 cats. This emphasizes the importance of vaccination. There were 3021 cats tested, which means that there was some suspicion that they might have been exposed to rabies, but only 14 were positive, and 12 were presumably unvaccinated strays. And 1930 dogs have been tested over the past 22 years, and none have tested positive. So keep up with your rabies vaccinations, because rabies is absolutely, invariably fatal once your pet is diagnosed with it.
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