Local Impact Spotlight:
- Dog is in quarantine while officials attempt to locate the owner; contact Chatham County Animal Services if you have information.
- No known human exposures reported; seek medical care immediately after any animal bite.
- Local wildlife, including raccoons, foxes, and bats, can carry rabies.
- Protect pets with timely rabies vaccinations; call Chatham County Animal Services at 912-652-6575 or Chatham County Environmental Health at 912-356-2160.
The Chatham County Health Department’s Environmental Health office is alerting the community that a raccoon has tested positive for rabies. A resident called Chatham County Animal Services on July 2nd after a dog killed the raccoon near Ferguson Avenue and Diamond Causeway. The raccoon was sent to the public health laboratory and tested positive for rabies on July 7th.
The dog is in quarantine with animal services while the agency works to locate the dog’s owner. There was no known human exposure to the infected raccoon.
This incident is a reminder that several species of wild animals in our area can carry rabies, including raccoons, foxes, and bats. Rabies is a potentially deadly virus that is primarily spread by infected animals. The following tips can protect you and your family from rabies:
- Avoid contact with animals you don’t know.
- Make sure your pets receive the proper immunizations. Dogs and cats should get rabies vaccines after 12 weeks of age, followed by a booster shot within one year and vaccination every 1-3 years depending on veterinary recommendation and vaccine used.
- Do not handle, feed, or unintentionally attract wild animals with open garbage cans or by leaving pet food out at night.
- Never adopt wild animals or bring them into your home. Do not try to nurse sick animals to health. Call animal services or a properly licensed animal rescue agency for assistance.
- Teach children to never handle unfamiliar animals, wild or domestic, even if they appear friendly. “Love your own, leave other animals alone” is a good principle for children to learn.
Symptoms of rabies in animals include a change in behavior, biting, aggression, showing no fear of natural enemies (such as humans), foaming at the mouth, and paralysis. If an animal ever bites you, seek medical care immediately and contact Chatham County Animal Services at 912-652-6575 and the Chatham County Environmental Health office at 912-356-2160.
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