Tag

Bat Exposure

All articles tagged with #bat exposure

Ontario boy’s fatal rabies case linked to bat exposure highlights risk and delays in treatment
health12 days ago

Ontario boy’s fatal rabies case linked to bat exposure highlights risk and delays in treatment

An 11-year-old in Ontario died from rabies after waking to find a bat on his face during a 2024 cottage stay. The bat was removed outside, and the family did not seek immediate medical care, despite guidance to evaluate any direct bat contact for possible rabies. Weeks later he developed facial swelling and paralysis, was misdiagnosed with herpes and Bell’s palsy, and his condition rapidly worsened until he died 17 days after hospital admission. Rabies is almost always fatal once symptoms appear but preventable with timely postexposure treatment; human rabies is rare in Canada and the U.S., and this was Ontario’s first case since 1967.

Ontario boy’s bat encounter prompts health-warning after rabies death
health12 days ago

Ontario boy’s bat encounter prompts health-warning after rabies death

An 11-year-old in northern Ontario died of rabies after a cottage-area bat touched his face; the bat was swatted away and later released, but the family did not seek medical care since there were no bites, and symptoms appeared weeks later. He died after more than two weeks in hospital. CMAJ emphasizes that any contact with a bat should prompt public health consultation, even without a visible wound, because postexposure prophylaxis can prevent most rabies deaths.

Ontario boy dies of rabies after bat contact, prompting warning on urgent post-exposure care
health13 days ago

Ontario boy dies of rabies after bat contact, prompting warning on urgent post-exposure care

An 11-year-old in northern Ontario woke to a bat on his face and, despite no visible bite, later died from rabies—the first locally acquired human case in Ontario since 1967. The case highlights the importance of seeking immediate medical evaluation after any direct bat contact, since rabies is almost always fatal once symptoms appear, though prompt post‑exposure treatment can prevent infection.

Ontario records first locally acquired rabies death since 1967 after bat encounter
health15 days ago

Ontario records first locally acquired rabies death since 1967 after bat encounter

An 11-year-old boy in Ontario died of rabies—the first locally acquired case there since 1967—after an encounter with a bat even though no bite was visible. Health professionals stress seeking immediate medical advice after any direct bat contact because post-exposure prophylaxis can prevent rabies, which is nearly always fatal once symptoms appear. Testing the bat for rabies can guide public health actions, and the case underscores the unpredictable incubation period and the importance of early intervention.