Orange County NC Website
Animal Services Monthly Report September, 2008 <br /> <br />7 <br />Our own public education activities stress that pet owners not only need to be sure that <br />their pets are vaccinated and licensed but that a dog or cat with a current rabies <br />vaccination must receive a booster shot within seventy-two (72) hours of any exposure to <br />rabies. Unless an exposed pet with a current vaccination receives a booster shot within <br />that time frame, the requirements of North Carolina law is the same as for an <br />unvaccinated animal—namely, euthanasia or a six (6) month quarantine. In this regard, <br />staff stresses the immediate reporting of any possible contact to animal control and/or <br />public health authorities to ensure the health of all members of a household—human and <br />pet alike. <br /> <br />As can also be seen from the table on rabies exposures, Animal Control Officers <br />investigated five (5) cases in which there were possible rabies exposures. Usually, these <br />are cases involving known or suspected contact between a domestic small animal such as <br />a dog or a cat and a wild animal such as a raccoon, as well as whether there is indirect <br />contact between a human and pet member of a household in these situations. But our <br />Animal Control Officers are also responsible for bite reports involving dogs and cats (as <br />well as other animals) and a human victim. In these cases, it is a legal requirement and <br />public health precaution that a dog or cat biting a human being be contained and observed <br />for a period of ten (10) days—thereby ensuring that the bite victim was not exposed to <br />the rabies virus. <br /> <br />Efforts to ensure current vaccination, for the welfare of pets and the people with whom <br />they come into contact, are ongoing and activities in this area are captured by vaccination <br />statistics compiled by our Animal Control Division. As is ordinarily the case, the <br />majority of these vaccinations—1175 out of a total of 1484 vaccinations—continue to be <br />performed at veterinary establishments. In addition, another sixty-eight (68) animals <br />were vaccinated at our Animal Shelter prior to their adoption or recovery. <br /> <br />Three low-cost rabies vaccination clinics were held in September in celebration of the <br />second annual World Rabies Day, a worldwide event designed to promote rabies <br />awareness and prevention. A total of two hundred and forty-one (241) cats and dogs <br />were vaccinated at these three clinics (as can be seen in table C.4 Year to Date Rabies <br />Vaccination Clinic Numbers). To date 1055 animals have been vaccinated at seventeen <br />2008 clinics. Seventeen total clinics were held during 2007—and 1157 dogs and cats <br />were vaccinated as a result. Details and further information on low-cost rabies <br />vaccination clinics can be found at http://www.co.orange.nc.us/animalservices.rabies.asp. <br /> <br />All of these activities—public education and outreach, investigations and enforcement, <br />and providing low-cost vaccination clinics—are critical given that Orange County <br />continues to be affected by the epidemic of “eastern raccoon rabies” that began in the <br />latter half of the 1990s. Their essential nature is further underscored by the current view <br />that we are on the upside of a raccoon rabies cycle that may bring even higher numbers of <br />confirmed rabies cases than we have seen in recent years. <br /> <br /> <br />