Does a dog bite necessarily have rabies?

Updated on pet 2024-07-24
12 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-13

    The chance of getting rabies from a dog bite is very small. It is only possible to get rabies if you have been bitten by a dog carrying the rabies virus. It's not uncommon for us to be bitten by dogs and scratched by cats when we were children.

    If you are bitten by a dog, the parents will take you to the owner of the dog, and burn the hair on the dog's body to ash and wipe it on the wound. There was a shortage of doctors and no rabies vaccinations. Now it's different, after being bitten by a dog, you must get a rabies vaccine within 24 hours to prevent it, because there is no cure for rabies.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    I don't think so, dogs, like people, can only be infected by other mad dog bites, and the average probability of dogs being poisonous is only a few in 10,000, even lower in urban areas, and even if they are really bitten by a mad dog, the risk of infection is only 1 3, so even if they are bitten by a dog and do nothing, the probability of getting rabies in the end is only 1 in 10,000. I was bitten by a dog and had to be vaccinated against rabies just in caseIt's good to be prepared.

    The speed of infection is still very fast, and now there are too many stray dogs, which can easily cause this disease.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Rabies is actually rabies, mainly in rabid dogs, normal dogs do not have rabies, so they will not let people get rabies, because there is no source of infection. However, there are a certain number of healthy dogs that carry the rabies virus, and these dogs appear to be healthy on the surface, but they carry the rabies virus in their bodies without getting sick, and if they are injured by these dogs, there is a risk of contracting rabies. Therefore, if you are injured by a cat or dog in a rabies-infested area, you should treat the wound promptly and get vaccinated against rabies for human use.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Generally not, the treatment of the bite is as follows, immediately squeeze the wound to drain the blood contaminated with venom, rinse with soapy water or water for 15 minutes, and then rub the wound with iodine, and go to the rabies vaccination site for vaccination in time. The incidence of rabies is very low, and rabies is rarely absent after being bitten.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Personally, I don't think I will get sick, and if I am unfortunately bitten, I should go to the hospital for examination and vaccination. Usually if the dog that bites you has been vaccinated against rabies, you won't be fine. If the dog has not been vaccinated and you have no other symptoms within two weeks of the vaccination, you will not get the disease.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    No matter how low the probability is, don't gamble your life. Even one in a trillion, you can't afford to lose! Therefore, people who have been bitten by a dog and do not necessarily get rabies are irresponsible for other people's lives.

    As long as you are bitten by a dog, no matter what kind of dog it is or what state it is, you must pay 100% attention to it, clean the wound, and get vaccinated. Don't leave anything to chance. Because you only live once.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Rabies virus is a virus that anesthetizes human spirits with an incubation period of up to 20 years, and very few people are actually bitten to death by the rabies virus. Its onset is between two weeks and two months, and if it does not occur within a year, then 99% of cases will never occur again. However, after being bitten by a dog, it is still necessary to take preventive vaccinations to prevent the disease before it happens.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Regardless of whether you get it or not, you must take the injection as soon as possible to prevent it from happening, of course, it is best not to let the dog bite, and you don't even need to get the vaccination. If you have been bitten by a dog, you will not have rabies in most cases. Now that the standard of living is improving and the health and medical conditions are sufficient, don't believe in the 10-day observation method, once the best injection period is over, it will be too late to regret it!

    If you have been bitten by a dog, you will be vaccinated against rabies as soon as possible!

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    I don't think so! But don't dare to bet! If you lose, you lose everything! According to data released by the World Health Organization, tens of millions of people are bitten by dogs every year, and 60,000 die of rabies!

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Once you are bitten by a dog and contracted rabies, you are 100%, if you are infected with rabies, even if you are vaccinated, it will not save your life, do not think that the vaccine is a protective miracle drug, and the prevention of rabies should start with a complete ban on dogs in the city.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Anyway, you can't take chances, it's okay if you don't get sick, but if you get sick, you can't be helped.

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Anyway, if you get it, you will die, see if you dare to bet.

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