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Thursday, July 20, 2006

Bat, Bat, Where You At?

Posted by on July 20 at 15:27 PM

I love bats. I really, really love bats.

Perhaps because of my grandfather, in southern Virginia, who was always working on some kind of construction project so he always had small chunks of wood, usually sweet-smiling pine, lying around that, at dusk, he would toss straight up into the air, where a dozen bats were circling, and three or four would sense the chunk of sweet-smelling pine and chase it down to the ground. “Fishing for bats,” we called it. We would sing out, as we tossed the chunks of sweet-smelling pine into the crepuscular sky: “Bat! Bat! Where you at?!”

Or perhaps because of a house I stayed in on the coast in a hot, foreign country, that had a broad, second-story veranda overlooking an overgrown courtyard and the nearby hills that would’ve had sagebrush had they been in America—a veranda where you could sit in the twilight and eat something fresh you just bought from a local fisherman and bread and olive oil and drink wine and talk to a pretty young woman visiting from a different hot, foreign country and watch the bats (hundreds of them) who lived in the eaves of the building come out, at first in ones and two and threes and then in dozens, circle the courtyard a couple of times, then head out for a night’s hunting, skimming above the sagebrush-less hills.

Bats are excruciatingly romantic.

But King County Public Health has, once again, brought the insidious hand of fear into my world with a press release about the dangers of bats, five to ten percent of which, in King County, test positive for rabies:

A recent human rabies case: In 2006, a Texas teenager awoke to find a bat in his room. Public Health in Texas was not contacted and the bat was not tested. The teenager did not seek medical care until symptoms of rabies appeared, at which point it was too late to receive preventive treatment. Sadly, the teenager died of rabies about five weeks after exposure to the bat.

My innocence is dying slowly, by the death of a thousand cuts. Thanks to King County for taking another slice.

The rest of the press release follows, below the jump.

Report contact with bats to Public Health

KING COUNTY, WA — Bats are a familiar sight during the warmer summer months as they fly at dusk hunting insects. While bats are no cause for fear, it is important to avoid touching them because of the risk of rabies. Approximately 5-10% of bats that are tested in King County are found to have rabies, so anyone finding a bat on the ground or in a house should take precautions to avoid having direct contact with the bat.

"Our biggest concern for rabies exposure occurs when a person handles a bat found on the ground or one that a pet brings in,ā€¯ said Dr. Sharon Hopkins, Public Health - Seattle & King County's veterinarian. "A bat found in a bedroom or where young children have been playing or where people have been sleeping is also a concern. Healthy bats tend to stay away from humans, so any bat seen on the ground or in your home might have rabies and should not be touched.ā€¯

Any actual or potential bat-human contact should be reported to Public Health. Bat-human contact is any kind of bare skin contact, including touching, handling, being bitten or getting scratched. Sometimes bare skin contact with a bat cannot be ruled out. For example, if a bat is found in a room where people have been asleep or in a room with a young child, there is a possibility that a tiny, unnoticeable bite or scratch occurred.

Since the beginning of June 2006 in King County:

18 bat exposures have been reported to Public Health (some exposures involved multiple people, e.g. several members of a household exposed to a single bat)
5 bats were tested and none were positive for rabies
13 people are being treated for potential exposure

Rabies is caused by a virus that attacks the brain and central nervous system. The virus is carried in the saliva of a rabid animal and is usually spread by a bite. Preventive treatment is available, though once symptoms begin, rabies infection is virtually always fatal.

Typical local exposure scenario
In late June, a Seattle woman called Public Health after she and her husband awoke to find a bat fluttering around their bedroom. The bat had likely been brought in by their cat, and was partially mauled but still alive. They safely captured the bat, and called Public Health. Public Health tested the bat and found it was not infected with rabies. Therefore, neither she nor her husband needed to get rabies preventive treatment. The woman said, "We were very happy that we got the bat tested immediately and that our cat was up-to-date on its rabies vaccination.ā€¯

A recent human rabies case
In 2006, a Texas teenager awoke to find a bat in his room. Public Health in Texas was not contacted and the bat was not tested. The teenager did not seek medical care until symptoms of rabies appeared, at which point it was too late to receive preventive treatment. Sadly, the teenager died of rabies about five weeks after exposure to the bat.

What to do if you find a bat
If an exposure occurred and the bat is available for testing, Public Health will facilitate testing of the bat free of charge. If the bat is negative for rabies, no preventive treatment for rabies will be recommended. If the bat tests positive for rabies, or if the bat is unavailable for testing, rabies preventive treatment will be recommended.

If you find a dead or living bat inside the house, call Public Health. Do not shoo the bat outside! It is possible that the bat touched, bit, or scratched a family member while they were asleep.
Use a shovel or wear heavy leather gloves to pick up the bat and put it in a secure box or a coffee can with a lid for testing. Pest control operators can assist in capturing a live bat for a fee. For specific instructions on capturing a bat, see http://www.metrokc.gov/HEALTH/prevcont/bats.htm.

If your pet has a bat in its mouth, wear thick leather gloves to remove it.
If you find a dead bat outside, do not touch it with your bare hands.
If a bat has potentially exposed a person and has been captured, call Public Health - Seattle & King County at 206-296-4774. If the exposure was to a pet only, consult your pet's veterinarian and call the Public Health veterinarian at 206-296-4880.
Screen windows and doors to keep bats from chasing an insect inside your home.

Protect your pets, too

King County regulations require that dogs, cats and ferrets be vaccinated for rabies by the age of four months with regular boosters after that. Check with your veterinarian to ensure your pets' rabies vaccinations are up-to-date.
If a pet has had contact with a bat or other wild animal such as a raccoon, contact your veterinarian and the Public Health veterinarian for advice.

For more information about bats and rabies, visit
http://www.metrokc.gov/HEALTH/prevcont/bats.htm.

For general information about rabies prevention, visit http://www.metrokc.gov/HEALTH/env_hlth/rabies.htm.

Providing effective and innovative health and disease prevention services for over 1.8 million residents and visitors of King County, Public Health - Seattle & King County works for safer and healthier communities for everyone, every day.


CommentsRSS icon

I question their statistics. They say "5-10%" of bats tested in the county have rabies, but then say that none of the ones they've tested this year have it. I'm not convinced that bat rabies is any more common here than racoon rabies, or cat rabies (far more common than in dogs) for that matter.

Bats kick ass. At our cabin, there's a magic moment just past dusk when you realize that the swallows swooping for bugs have been replaced by bats doing the same. Maybe they have statistics for the disease cases PREVENTED by bats gobbling up all the bugs.

My step-mom's an epidemiologist, and growing up, she would sometimes store bat heads in our freezer before testing them for rabies.

She kept them in empty Ben & Jerry's containers. I always thought that was rather cruel.

"Mmm, Chunky Monkey sounds good.... AAGHH!!"

Are you sure she's not a witch? My step-mother certainly was and she didn't even keep bat heads in the freezer.

How do we *know* she is a witch?

For what it's worth, when I was living in a dry and dusty foreign country, a bat flew in my bedroom and died underneath my bed, infesting it -- and later, myself -- with the bedbugs that had lived on the bat. Not as romantic a story as yours, but now that the painful sores are long gone, even I can appreciate the weirdness and humor of the situation.

I have bat boxes on my garage. Tell you what, you'll never get bitten by a mosquito if you put up bat boxes. The bats eat them all.

It's weird the way people are with rodents. The furrier they are, the cuter people think they are, even though the semi-naked ones, like bats, are often the most useful, and the furry ones, like squirrels, are often the biggest pests.

(and yes, I know bats aren't really rodents - neither are rabbits, rabbits are lagomorphs - but since I cannot edit posts, I cannot edit the above to say "rodents and similar creatures")

Fnarf - In the US, I'm sure rabies in bats is more common than dogs and cats because of vaccination of pets, but I don't believe that rabies is more common in bats than other wild animals. They are more often responsible for rabies in humans in the US (in developing nations, dogs are most often responsible), but that is because often if people get a bite from a bat, they don't go for medical treatment. They DO go for treatment if they get bitten by a raccoon or other animal because it's usually a nasty bite. I used to study bats and the worst bite I got was invisible unless you knew where to look and spent about 5 min looking for it.

Poor bats get a bad, bad rap. But the advice given is great. Don't mess with bats unless you have to and play it safe if you do encounter a bat, esp one acting off.

batcon.org has more info on bats and insects. I forget the #s but there are amazing statistics on how many mosquitos bats eat in a night, and I believe also for the impact of bats on agricultural pests (Mexican free-tails follow pests migrations, and these bats roost in the 100k's if not millions.)

Me, I studied pollinator bats. Bats pollinate agaves, agaves are used to make tequila, tequilas are used to make margaritas, margaritas are used to make happy times for me. :) It's all good!

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