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Health17:47 · 1h ago

Canadian Boy Dies of Rabies After Bat Encounter During Family Vacation

YnetCenter
Translated & summarized from Ynet by baba
The story · English

An 11-year-old Canadian boy died from rabies after waking up during a family vacation in an Ontario cabin to find a bat on his face. His parents, unaware of any injuries or danger, did not seek medical treatment, a decision that proved fatal. The incident occurred in 2024 and was detailed in a report published by the Canadian Medical Association Journal. After removing the bat, the boy's father captured and released it outside the cabin. Since there were no visible bite marks and the bat showed no unusual behavior, the family did not pursue preventive rabies treatment.

Nineteen days later, the boy began experiencing facial numbness and swelling. Initially, doctors suspected Bell's palsy or herpes virus infection. The family informed hospital staff about the bat encounter, prompting emergency room doctors to notify local public health authorities. Despite this, the boy was discharged with an incorrect diagnosis. His condition rapidly worsened, developing high fever, difficulty swallowing, confusion, and hallucinations. He was intubated and admitted to a pediatric intensive care unit. Physicians at the University of Manitoba suspected rabies, which laboratory tests later confirmed, identifying a bat-origin rabies virus strain. The boy died 17 days after hospitalization.

The report emphasizes that any direct contact with bats requires immediate rabies prophylaxis, even without visible wounds, as rabies is almost always fatal once symptoms appear. According to the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association, only 28 rabies deaths have been recorded in Canada since 1924, largely due to extensive vaccination programs. The Israeli Ministry of Health notes that while bats in Israel have not been found infected with rabies, some species can carry the virus, so all bat contacts should be treated as potential rabies exposures. Minor or invisible bat-inflicted wounds are considered high-risk exposure, necessitating urgent medical evaluation and treatment.

Read the original at Ynet
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