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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Posts
    629
    Quote Originally Posted by CycleTherapy View Post
    I had a friend who unknowingly slept in a room with one under her bed. Even though it was dead, she had to have the rabies vaccination. You do not have to be bitten and you did come in physical contact with the bat.
    The fear there is that the bat may have bitten her -- bat teeth are really tiny -- and then died while she was sleeping. If she'd seen the dead bat before she went to bed... well, she probably wouldn't have gone to bed!

    Seems to me the bat, already dead, could have been tested before someone decided she needed to have the rabies series. I wonder why they didn't do that?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Desert SW
    Posts
    95
    It was due to time. It was going to be a period of 4-5 days to determine whether or not the bat was diseased. The County in which this happened had the bat sent to a laboratory in Atlanta. By the time they received it, the bat had been deceased for too long. Better safe than sorry, my friend had no problem complying with the recommendation for the vaccinations. She also had touched the dead bat... any contact with a carrier, dead or alive, can transmit rabies.
    "Your vision will become clear only when you look into your heart...Who looks outside, dreams. Who looks inside, awakens." Carl Jung

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    around Seattle, WA
    Posts
    3,238
    Bats are cute, little flying mice, although the fruit eating bats of the tropics are called flying foxes - they have a long fox-like face. When I worked for County Parks way back when, we had an ill bat in the cash drop drawer. I caught it, kept it in the dark until evening, then planned to release it away from the entry booth area, but alas, it died. It was a little Pipsitrelle (smallest of the North American bats) http://www.desertmuseum.org/kids/bat...ipistrelle.php. Since I worked at a park, and we had a museum, I decided to stuff the little guy - turned out it had a sinus infection.
    When I was a university student I worked in the mammal collection (where I learned to stuff things), and the department head liked bats, so I got to help mist-net them on occasion, or just take care of and catalogue those in the collection. They are a fascinating class of mammals. And I have to admit, the Pipsitrelles are my favorites.
    Beth

 

 

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