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Taiwan on a High Alert After Rabies Outbreak

by Dr. Enozia Vakil on Aug 4 2013 5:29 PM

After 22 infections, Taiwan has now been put on a high alert.

 Taiwan on a High Alert After Rabies Outbreak
After 22 infections, Taiwan has now been put on a high alert.
Taiwan started reporting rabies cases last month. Prior to the outbreak, Taiwan had been rabies-free since 1959. No humans or dogs have yet been reported infected in the current outbreak.

A case of rabies was found in a ferret-badger in Taichung, bringing the total number of confirmed rabies cases to 22 on the island, including one case of an infected Asian house shrew, Xinhua reported.

Officials said three ferret-badgers from Chiayi also tested positive for rabies.

Though transmission of rabies between members of the same species was common, but when the virus spreads between different species, "that becomes something alarming, because it creates complications in curbing the disease", an official said.

Seven counties and cities - Chiayi, Nantou, Yunlin, Taitung, Taichung, Tainan and Kaohsiung - have reported rabies cases.

Environmental protection authorities have purchased 2,000 traps.

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The epidemic has created panic on the island. Some people have abandoned their pet cats and dogs, despite assurances from experts that their animals are safe as long as they have been vaccinated against rabies.

Officials called on people to put off adopting stray cats and dogs without a quarantine certificate.

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To engage the public in epidemic control, Gukung township in Yunlin county carried out a "catch a stray cat or dog, get a pack of rice" campaign, offering 2.5-kg packets of rice to people who catch a stray animal.

Officials told public not to panic, as the rabies virus is mainly transmitted through being bitten or scratched by an infected animal. The disease can still be treated after a bite or scratch, as long as a vaccination is administered in time.

Source-IANS


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