FDA Logo--links to FDA home page
U.S. Food and Drug Administration
HHS Log--links to Department of Health and Human Services website

FDA Home Page | Search FDA Site | FDA A-Z Index | Contact FDA


horizontal rule

Consumer Update

red envelope Sign up for Consumer Updates by e-mail

RSS feed RSS feed for Consumer Updates [what is RSS?]

Main Consumer Health Information Page

Precautions to Prevent Rabies

On this page

One person dies from rabies every 10 minutes somewhere in the world. The brain-attacking virus kills more than 55,000 people each year, mostly in Africa and Asia, according to the Alliance for Rabies Control.

But only one or two people each year die from rabies in the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports. This low number is due in part to the availability of lifesaving, FDA-approved vaccines designed specifically for use in people exposed to rabies. Only one person in the United States is known to have recovered from rabies without receiving a rabies vaccination.

Human Rabies Vaccines

Anti-rabies vaccines are given to as many as 40,000 people in the United States each year after potential exposure to the rabies virus. The vaccine, as part of rabies treatment, is nearly 100% successful, if received in time.

"The sooner treatment is begun after exposure, the better," says Robin Levis, Ph.D., Associate Director for Regulatory Policy in FDA's Office of Vaccines Research and Review/Division of Viral Products.

A person may be exposed to rabies when the virus enters the body through the saliva of an infected animal, usually by a bite. Rabies can also be transmitted if infected saliva gets into an open wound. Several cases of rabies have been the result of unapparent exposure to the virus from bats.

The treatment for rabies after exposure consists of one injection of proteins that fight the infection (anti-rabies immune globulin) and five injections of rabies vaccine over a 28-day period. The vaccine works by stimulating a person's immune system to produce antibodies that neutralize the virus.

Older rabies vaccines required painful, daily injections in the abdomen for up to three weeks, and they could produce severe side effects, says Levis. Today's rabies vaccines require fewer injections, are given in the arm, and have few serious side effects.

People who are considered at high risk for exposure to rabies, such as veterinarians, wildlife officers, animal handlers, and some laboratory workers, may get rabies vaccines to help protect them before they are exposed to the virus.

Prevention Tips

It's not always easy to recognize a rabid animal. Depending on the type of rabies an animal has, it may be aggressive and vicious, or timid and shy. Wild animals may appear abnormally tame. Animals in the early stage of rabies may not show any signs, but can still infect you if they bite you.

Date Posted: October 22, 2007

horizontal rule