[AGL] Re: Before Going Bats in the belfry
Frances Morey
frances_morey at yahoo.com
Tue Jun 20 00:39:45 EDT 2006
Wayne,
This article is very interesting. I have no doubt that such things can and do happen so your alarm is well taken. I am also aware that 75% of all the bullets fired in the Civil War never met their intended target. Chance being what it is, I'm betting that the bats didn't bite me as opposed to taking a chance that they did, and undergoing a series of rabbies shots. I don't consider this bio-hubris, just an old fashioned confidence in my own streak of continuing good luck.
Best,
Frances
Wayne Johnson <cadaobh at shentel.net> wrote:
The information that I got from the Texas Department of Health was that 90% of Mexican Free-tail bats had rabies. I never said 90% of all bats. The numbers may have changed since then, but the MFT is still the best candidate. The number of people who have died in the last ten or so years is quite small.
Still, I am a little bit confused about exactly what the "message" is here, Karen. Is it that there is little to worry about from incidental contact with any bat? All bats? Bats which may or may not be rabid?
Or is it...just don't worry about anything?
Or is it...just don't worry about anything Wayne J says?
I thought the following clipping might be of some interest.
-------------------------------
Texas teenager dies of rabies from bat bite
16-year-old dies week after becoming sick from bite received month before
Reuters
Updated: 7:51 a.m. ET May 13, 2006
function UpdateTimeStamp(pdt) { var n = document.getElementById("udtD"); if(pdt != '' & n & window.DateTime) { var dt = new DateTime(); pdt = dt.T2D(pdt); if(dt.GetTZ(pdt)) {n.innerHTML = dt.D2S(pdt,(('false'.toLowerCase()=='false')?false:true));} } } UpdateTimeStamp('632831178909400000'); HOUSTON - A Texas teenager who was bitten by a bat while he slept in his home has died of rabies, the Houston hospital that treated him said in a statement.
Zachary Jones, 16, died Friday, a week after he became ill from the bat bite he received about a month before.
According to U.S. Centers for Disease Control statistics, only 10 other people have died of rabies in the United States since 1998.
Rabies, which causes devastating neurological damage, is almost always fatal once symptoms appear, as was the case with this child, Texas Childrens Hospital said in a statement.
A 15-year-old girl from Wisconsin who contracted rabies in 2004 survived after the onset of symptoms, which can take weeks to develop.
Doctors at Texas Childrens were trying the same treatment on Jones that saved the girl, but a spokeswoman told the Houston Chronicle the boys illness was more advanced and he had a different strain of rabies.
A bat apparently flew through an open window into Jones room while he was napping. He felt the bat brush against him, but did not know he had been bitten, health officials said.
The bat was captured with a towel and thrown out the window so it was never examined for rabies, they said.
Bats are common in Texas in spring as they migrate north after spending the winter in Mexico. Wildlife experts say they consume insects and help pollinate useful plants.
----- Original Message -----
From: Karen Willis
To: survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s
Sent: Monday, June 19, 2006 6:10 PM
Subject: RE: [AGL] Re: Bats in the belfry
This is not true that 90 percent of bats carry rabies. If you get bit, Frances, do your best to catch the bat so it can be tested. If you don't get bit, you don't have to worry. This is nothing to be alarmed about. All of us who frequent the Congress Avenue bridge area are in relatively close proximity to numerous bats. I'm not afraid for my life.
Karen
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