Primary Navigation for the CDC Website
CDC en Español


Rabies

Epidemiology

  • Annual Surveillance in the United States during:

  • PDF Document Icon 2006 (PDF – 793 KB)
  • PDF Document Icon 2005 (PDF – 1.5 MB)
  • PDF Document Icon 2004 (PDF – 1.7 MB)
  • PDF Document Icon 2003 (PDF – 1.0 MB)
  • PDF Document Icon 2002 (PDF – 349 KB)

United States Rabies Surveillance Data, 2006

Each year, scientists from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) collect information about cases of animal and human rabies from the state health departments and publish the information in a summary report. The most recent report, entitled "Rabies surveillance in the United States during 2006," contains the epidemiologic information on rabies during 2006. Below is a brief summary of the surveillance information for 2006, including maps showing the distribution of rabies in the United States.

In 2006, 49 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico tested over 113,000 animals and reported 6,940 cases of rabies in animals and 3 human cases to CDC (Hawaii is the only state that is rabies free). The total number of reported cases increased by 8.2% from those reported in 2005 (6,418 cases).

Wild Animals

Wild animals accounted for 92% of reported cases of rabies in 2006. Raccoons continued to be the most frequently reported rabid wildlife species (37.7% of all animal cases during 2006), followed by bats (24.4%), skunks (21.5%), foxes (6.2%), and other wild animals, including rodents and lagomorphs (0.6%). Reported cases increased among all wild animals during 2006.

Outbreaks of rabies infections in terrestrial mammals like raccoons, skunks, foxes, and coyotes are found in broad geographic regions across the United States. Geographic boundaries of currently recognized reservoirs for rabies in terrestrial mammals are shown on the map below.

Domestic Animals

Domestic species accounted for 8% of all rabid animals reported in the United States in 2006. The number of reported rabid domestic animals increased among all species during 2006 except cattle which decreased by 11.8% compared to 2005.

In 2006, cases of rabies in cats increased 18.2% compared with the number reported in 2005. The number of rabies cases reported in cats is routinely 3-4 times as that of rabies reported in cattle or dogs. Pennsylvania reported the largest number of rabid domestic animals (72) for any state, followed by Virginia (62). In 2006 approximately 1% of cats and 0.3% of dogs tested for rabies were found positive.

Human Rabies

In this century, the number of human deaths in the United States attributed to rabies has declined from 100 or more each year to an average of 2 or 3 each year. Two programs have been responsible for this decline. First, animal control and vaccination programs begun in the 1940's and oral rabies vaccination programs in the 2000’s have eliminated domestic dogs as reservoirs of rabies in the United States. Second, effective human rabies vaccines and immunolglobins have been developed . All human cases in the United States since 1990 are summarized in the Table of Human Rabies Cases from 1995- 2006 (see table below). The case histories of the ten most recent deaths can be found using the links below.

Cases of rabies in human beings in the United States, by circumstances of exposure and rabies virus variant, 1995-2006*
Date of Death State of Residence Exposure History** Rabies Virus Variant*
15 Mar 1995 WA Unknown* Bat, Msp
21 Sep 1995 CA Unknown* Bat, Tb
03 Oct 1995 CT Unknown* Bat, Ln/Ps
09 Nov 1995 CA Unknown* Bat, Ln/Ps
08 Feb 1996 FL Dog bite - Mexico Dog, Mexico
20 Aug 1996 NH Dog bite - Nepal Dog, SE Asia
15 Oct 1996 KY Unknown Bat, Ln/Ps
19 Dec 1996 MT Unknown Bat, Ln/Ps
5 Jan 1997 MT Unknown# Bat, Ln/Ps
18 Jan 1997 WA Unknown# Bat, Ef
17 Oct 1997 TX Unknown# Bat, Ln/Ps
23 Oct 1997 NJ Unknown# Bat, Ln/Ps
31 Dec 1998 VA Unknown Bat, Ln/Ps
20 Sep 2000 CA Unknown# Bat, Tb
09 Oct 2000 NY Dog bite - Ghana Dog, Africa
10 Oct 2000 GA Unknown# Bat, Tb
25 Oct 2000 MN Bat bite - MN Bat, Ln/Ps
01 Nov 2000 WI Unknown# Bat, Ln/Ps
04 Feb 2001 CA Unknown# - Philippines Dog, Philippines
31 Mar 2002 CA Unknown# Bat, Tb
31 Aug 2002 TN Unknown# Bat, Ln/Ps
28 Sep 2002 IA Unknown# Bat, Ln/Ps
10 Mar 2003 VA Unknown# Raccoon, Eastern US
05 Jun 2003 PR Bite Dog/Mongoose, Puerto Rico
14 Sep 2003 CA Bite Bat, Ln/Ps
15 Feb 2004 FL Bite Dog, Hati
03 May 2004 AR Bite (organ donor) Bat, Tb
07 Jun 2004 OK Liver transplant recipient Bat, Tb
09 Jun 2004 TX Kidney transplant recipient Bat, Tb
10 Jun 2004 TX Arterial transplant recipient Bat, Tb
21 Jun 2004 TX Kidney transplant recipient Bat, Tb
survived 2004 WI Unknown# Bat, Unknown
26 Oct 2004 CA Unknown# Dog, El Salvador
27 Sep 2005 MS Unknown# Bat, Unknown
12 May 2006 TX Unknown# Bat, Tb
02 Nov 2006 IN Bite Bat, Ln/Ps
14 Dec 2006 CA Bite Dog, Philippines

* All laboratory-confirmed cases of rabies in human beings who developed the disease in the United States, 1990-2001.

** Data for exposure history are reported only when the biting animal was available and tested positive for rabies; or when plausible information was reported directly by the patient (if lucid or credible); or when a reliable account of an incident consistent with rabies exposure (e.g., dog bite) was reported by an independent witness (usually a family member). #In some instances where the exposure history is unknown, there may have been known or inferred interaction which, especially for bats, could have involved an unrecognized bite.

+ Variants of the rabies virus associated with terrestrial animals in the United States are identified with the name of the reservoir animal (dog or dog/coyote in all cases shown) followed by the name of the most definitive geographic entity (usually the country) from which the variant has been identified. Variants of the rabies virus associated with bats are identified with the name(s) of the species of bat(s) in which they have been found to be circulating. Because information regarding the location of the exposure and the identity of the exposing animal are almost always retrospective, and much information is frequently unavailable, the location of the exposure and the identity of the animal responsible for the infection are often limited to deduction.

Ln/Ps=Lasionycteris noctivagans or Pipistrellus subflavus, the silver-haired bat or the eastern pipistrelle; Msp=Myotis, species unknown; Tb=Tadarida brasiliensis, the Brazilian (Mexican) free-tailed bat; Ef=Eptesicus fuscus, the big brown bat.


PDF Document Icon Please note: Some of these publications are available for download only as *.pdf files. These files require Adobe Acrobat Reader in order to be viewed. Please review the information on downloading and using Acrobat Reader software.

Page last modified: September 18, 2007
Page last reviewed: September 18, 2007
Content Source: National Center for Zoonotic, Vector-Borne, & Enteric Diseases (ZVED)