Rabies Newslinks for the Rochester, NY area
RochesterEnvironment.com
These NewsLinks represent a decade of ferreting out local online
NewsLinks to the issue of Rabies.
The more recent stories are on the top and oldest at the bottom of
this list.
And, although many of these links no longer work, I believe that it
is important to be able to find that these stories have existed for
ferreting out existing or impending environmental problems. The
repercussions of pollution or overuse of a resource often takes a long
time for us to recognize and when we finally do, it is invaluable to be
able to track the history of various issues before they found a tipping
point and became a crisis. Students, scientists, historians, and
citizens alike should benefit from being able to follow the thread of an
issue back through time.
-
June is Rabies Awareness Month June is Rabies Awareness Month State
Health Commissioner Urges New Yorkers: Take Precautions Against Rabies
Exposure ALBANY, N.Y. (June 26, 2009) -- Governor David A. Paterson has
proclaimed June as Rabies Awareness Month in New York State to remind all
New Yorkers to take the necessary precautions to protect themselves
against rabies exposure from stray and wild animals.
New York State Department of
Health (June 65, 09)
-
Rabies clinic scheduled - 3/13/09 CLYDE - The Lyons
Vet Clinic and Wayne County Public Health Service invite the public to a
rabies clinic for pets 1 to 3 p.m. April 25 at the Galen Highway
Department on Ford Street in Clyde New York state law requires all cats,
dogs and ferrets over the age of 4 months be vaccinated against rabies.
(March 14, 09) News Index - Digital
Edition Courier-Gazette, Newark NY 14513
-
Rabies clinic at West Webster Fire Station | democratandchronicle.com |
Democrat and Chronicle A free rabies clinic will be held from 5 to 7
p.m. Oct. 23 at the West Webster Fire Station, 1051 Gravel Road.(Oct. 4,
08)
democratandchronicle.com | Democrat and Chronicle |
Rochester news, community, entertainment, yellow pages and classifieds.
Serving Rochester, New York
-
Case of Possible Bat Rabies Exposure Highlights Need for Greater Public
Awareness Tompkins County Seeks Individual for Post-Exposure
Treatment After Bat Tests Positive for Rabies ALBANY, NY (Aug 28, 2008)
– State Health Commissioner Richard F. Daines, M.D., today urged all New
Yorkers to know how to prevent rabies exposure and respond in the event
of a possible rabies exposure following a search this week for a man who
handled a bat that later tested positive for rabies. Testing conducted
at the State Health (Aug 28, 08)
New York State
Department of Health
-
Possible bat rabies exposure highlights need for greater
public awareness ALBANY – State Health
Commissioner Dr. Richard Daines, Thursday urged all New Yorkers to know
how to prevent rabies exposure and respond in the event of a possible
rabies exposure following a search this week for a man who handled a bat
that later tested positive for rabies. (Aug. 29,
New York State
News on the Net!
-
Rabies Back in Monroe County -
Monroe County Health Officials have confirmed four cases of rabies in
the Rochester area this year. Several Pittsford children may have
recently been exposed to the disease after bringing home a rabid baby
raccoon they found on a golf course in Perinton. A Churchville woman may
have also been exposed after fishing a rabid bat out of a pool then
trying to nurse it back to health. (July 17, 08)
R News: As It Happens,
Where It Happens
-
Monroe County Health Department Warns of Rabies Risk
ROCHESTER, NY (2008-07-17) The Monroe County
Health Department is warning people against taking in wild animals after
several people were exposed to rabies.
WXXI Public Broadcasting Council
-
Media Advisory: State Health Commissioner Demonstrates how to Catch a
Bat ALBANY, N.Y. (June 17, 2008) – On Thursday, June 19, at 11:30
a.m. at the state rabies laboratory in Guilderland, State Health
Commissioner Richard F. Daines, M.D., and rabies experts will
demonstrate how to safely catch a bat found in a home. The demonstration
will highlight the importance of capturing a bat that may have come in
contact with people or pets. A captured bat can be tested for rabies at
the laboratory and people can avoid unnecessary rabies treatment if the
bat tests negative for rabies. Many New Yorkers are unsure what to do if
they discover a bat in their home. As a result, each year more than
1,400 New Yorkers undergo rabies treatment because the bat they were
exposed to was NOT caught and submitted for testing. (July 17, 08) New York
State Department of Health
-
Health department: Parma dog has rabies - Rochester, NY - MPNnow
Monroe County health officials were informed yesterday that a dog from
Parma that fought with a rabid raccoon in late April has tested positive
for rabies. A total of two dogs were quarantined after coming in contact
with the rabid raccoon, and were being monitored by health officials.
Last Tuesday, one of the dogs began to show neurological symptoms of
rabies, and was euthanized by a veterinarian and tested for rabies by
the New York State Health Department. (June 14, 08)
- Rochester, NY - MPNnow
-
Two Parma residents receive shots for possible rabies exposure |
democratandchronicle.com | Democrat and Chronicle Two Parma
residents are receiving treatment for possible rabies exposure after a
raccoon tested positive for the disease, the first such case in Monroe
County this year, public health officials said Friday. (April 26, 08)
democratandchronicle.com | Democrat
and Chronicle | Rochester news,
community, entertainment, yellow
pages and classifieds. Serving
Rochester, New York
-
CDC to
Recognize the First World Rabies Day! - WORLD
RABIES DAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2007 Working together to make rabies history!
Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention
-
State Health Commissioner Urges Rabies Prevention: Observes September 8
as 'World Rabies Day' Albany, N.Y. The New York State Health
Department today joined public health leaders worldwide in an effort to
eliminate the fatal disease of rabies by observing September 8 as World
Rabies Day. "Rabies is a viral disease that leads to a brain infection
and death in almost all cases," said State Health Commissioner Richard
F. Daines, M.D. "While New York has not seen a human rabies case since
2000, more than 3,000 individuals received treatment for exposure to
rabies last year." There were 612 reports of rabid animals in New York
last year. (Sept. 7, 2007) -
New York State
Department of Health
-
Press Advisory: State Health Commissioner Participates in Annual Effort
to Fight Raccoon Rabies Albany, N.Y. (Aug 17, 2007) - New York State
Health Commissioner Richard F. Daines, M.D., will participate in the
annual state rabies bait drop on Monday, August 20 over northeastern New
York from a state helicopter to fight the northward spread of raccoon
rabies in New York and Canada. This year's annual rabies bait drop
mission is targeting eastern Essex and Clinton counties to reduce the
chance of human and domestic animal contact with rabid raccoons. Rabies
is a fatal disease. (August 18, 07) --New
York State Department of Health
-
State
Health Department Issues Precaution for New Yorkers to Help Avoid
Potential Exposure to Rabies from Wildlife To help
protect New Yorkers from the potential exposure to rabies from wildlife,
the State Health Department today reminded the public to avoid handling
wild animals. The practice of picking up wild animals, particularly
offspring, because of their cute and cuddly appearance, often requires
unnecessary rabies post exposure treatment for people. Individuals who
touch wild animals may have to undergo a month-long series of rabies
shots if they are bitten, scratched or had contact with the saliva or
nervous tissue of a potentially infected animal, unless it can be
euthanized and tested to rule out rabies. Rabies is a fatal disease
unless post exposure treatment is given before symptoms occur.
(May 31, 2006) - New York
State Department of Health
-
State Health Department Reminds New Yorkers to Take
Precautions to Protect Themselves, Pets from Rabies
ALBANY, May 13, 2005 –
State Health Commissioner Antonia C. Novello, M.D.,
M.P.H., Dr.P.H. today reminded New Yorkers to take
precautions against rabies by avoiding contact with
any wild animals and vaccinating their pets. As part
of the State's public awareness efforts, Governor
Pataki has proclaimed May as 'Rabies Awareness Month'
in New York State. Dr. Novello said "It is important
to note that no humans have been confirmed with rabies
in New York State over the past five years. However,
rabies is a public health issue that we continue to
combat in coordination with communities statewide to
help better educate New Yorkers about the disease and
the precautions they should take to avoid being
exposed to rabid animals."
New York State Department of Health
-
Rabid
Animals Show Up In Neighborhoods Rochester, NY -
(09/03/03) - Sources at the Monroe County Health Department said the fox
that bit a 5-year-old girl Tuesday tested positive for rabies. (September 4, 2003)
WOKR-TV 13 ||
ROCHESTER
- Democrat
& Chronicle: Officials issue bat warning
— Health
officials are issuing a warning that people should not handle bats, after
24 people in Monroe County had to receive rabies-prevention shots. The
people either found bats in their homes or disposed of dead bats near
their property without first calling the Monroe County Health Department,
officials said Friday. (August 9, 2003) Democrat and Chronicle
- Democrat & Chronicle: Bear that killed baby not rabid
FALLSBURG — A bear killed a 5-month-old girl Monday, knocking her
out of a stroller and carrying her into nearby woods, police said. Ward
Stone, state chief wildlife pathologist, said he could not remember a
black bear killing a human. (August 20, 2002)
Democrat and
Chronicle
-
Democrat
& Chronicle: Rabid fox suspected in Irondequoit
— Irondequoit Animal Control is on the lookout for a potentially
rabid fox that attacked at least three people near Titus Avenue Extension
over the weekend. Animal Control Supervisor Dick Keppler said a
10-year-old girl was chased Saturday morning by the fox, and a man doing
yard work Saturday afternoon felt a tug at his heel and looked down to see
a fox biting his shoe. (June 20, 2002)
DemocratandChronicle.com
-
Possible Rabid Fox In Irondequoit
Irondequoit, NY -
Irondequoit police and animal control are searching for a fox that may be
rabid. Four people came into contact with the animal, and two were bitten
by it. The fox was first sighted on Shore Road near the Titus Avenue
extension by the Irondequoit Bay on Saturday, when it chased a young girl
into her home. Later that evening, a man gardening was bitten in the heel
of his boot; the bite didn't break the skin. (June 20, 2002) WOKR13.TV
-
Democrat & Chronicle: Rabid bat causes alert in Ontario
County middle school June 7, 2002) — GORHAM --
Ontario County health and school officials have alerted parents that some
students at Marcus Whitman Middle School were exposed to rabies when a
seventh-grader unknowingly brought a dead bat infected with the disease to
school on Monday. (June 7, 2002)
DemocratandChronicle.com
-
Boy Brings Bat With Rabies To School
Gorham, NY - A seventh
grader from Ontario County thought it would be ''neat'' to bring a dead
bat to school to show his friends. What he didn't know was that the bat
had rabies, and that that has caused much concern at Marcus Whitman Middle
School. (June 7, 2002)
WOKR13.TV
-
Democrat & Chronicle: Rabid raccoons put county on alert
— Monroe County officials are concerned after four rabid raccoons
were found here in recent months. "There seems to be extra reason to be
sure you have your pets immunized," said John Ricci, senior public health
educator for Monroe County. (May 21, 2002) DemocratandChronicle.com
-
Democrat & Chronicle: Hooray, we're No. 2! NY loses rabies
title — ALBANY --
After leading the nation in rabies cases for nearly 10 years, New York
state fell to second place last year with 821 confirmed cases. Texas,
where rabies is now rampant among skunks, claimed first place last year
with more than a thousand cases of the disease. New York has dealt with a
rabies epidemic since 1990, when large numbers of raccoons across the
Northeast began contracting the disease. At the
height of the epidemic in 1993, the state had more than 27-hundred cases.
(April 15, 2002)
DemocratandChronicle.com
-
Town residents alerted to rabies' protection
As warmer weather
approaches, animal control officers issue some do's and don'ts.
A Greece man's recent exposure to rabies serves as a reminder to town
residents that they need to be careful around wild animals, according to
Pete Braggins, Greece animal control officer. (April 11, 2002) Greece
Post
-
County
Warns of Rabid Animals PDF Link: Rabies
attacks Fox Cat Bats 2001.pdf --(Wednesday, August 15, 2001)
--from Jack Doyle, Monroe County Executive
- Rabies
infections cause concern -- Monroe County health officials
are asking residents to stay clear of any stray or wild animals after
several people and two cats were attacked by a rabid fox last week.
The fox was killed and tested after it bit two people and confronted
two others, exposing them to its saliva. (Wednesday, August 15, 2001) -DEMOCRAT AND
CHRONICLE
-
Rabid
Animals Spotted In Perinton And Greece Rochester, NY
- The Monroe County Health Department is warning people to be cautious
of animals with rabies. The Health Department says a rabid fox
viciously attacked several people in Perinton, and two stray cats were
found with rabies--one in Perinton and one in Greece; both incidents
occurred last week. (Tuesday, August 14, 2001) iKnowRochester.com
- 6
treated for rabies in Newark NEWARK (Friday, May 11, 2001)
-- Three children and three adults are undergoing rabies treatments
following two separate fox attacks in this Wayne County village.
(Friday, May 11, 2001) --DEMOCRAT AND
CHRONICLE
-
Raccoon
That Bit Pittsford Woman Was Rabid Pittsford, NY - A
raccoon that bit a Pittsford woman outside her home last weekend
tested positive for rabies. The raccoon bit the woman through a boot
Sunday on Sutherland Street. The bite was not severe. The Health
Department said they have treated everyone they believe was in contact
with the raccoon. Health Department regulations required the animal to
be destroyed. (January 26, 2001)
RochesterToday
-
Air
War Against Rabies Officials are trying to vaccinate
wild raccoons. (November 7, 2000)
WROCTV
- Rabid
Fox In Pittsford There is another warning about the dangers
of wild animals. (August 9, 2000)
RochesterToday
- Bat Control May Backfire--Rabies.com
-
The
Epidemiology Of Bat Rabies In The USA
-
Why
bats you ask?
-
Catch the bat, or suffer the
painful consequences--The Times Herald
Record Online