| Literature DB >> 25166925 |
Bryant J Webber, Karyn J Ayers, Brad S Winterton, Heather C Yun, Thomas L Cropper, Johnnie Foster, Matthew C Kren, Brianna Y Meek, Tiffany A Oliver, Christopher M Hudson.
Abstract
In January 2014, members of the Joint Base San Antonio (JBSA)-Lackland, Texas, preventive medicine and public health teams evaluated a U.S. Air Force basic training squadron for potential exposure in sleeping bays to rabies virus carried by Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis). Exposure to bats while asleep or otherwise unaware is an important risk factor for rabies in the United States. Over the past several decades, most indigenous human rabies infections in the United States have resulted from the bite of an infected bat, and the bite was not reported in more than half of the cases. Mexican free-tailed bats in Texas often carry rabies virus. Among 8,904 bats tested during 2001-2010, a total of 1,558 (18%) tested positive for rabies. To assess the risk to the Air Force trainees and identify those for whom rabies postexposure prophylaxis (PEP) might be indicated, Lackland preventive medicine and public health teams interviewed 922 persons (866 trainees and 56 instructors) and determined that PEP, consisting of human rabies immune globulin and the 4-dose vaccination series given over 14 days, was indicated for 200 persons (22%). This report describes the public health response to a mass indoor exposure to bats, including group-based rabies risk stratification, adverse reactions to PEP, and infestation remediation. These interventions can be considered for future mass exposures to bats.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25166925 PMCID: PMC5779441
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
FIGUREFloor plan of a dormitory housing one flight* of U.S. Air Force basic trainees — Joint Base San Antonio (JBSA)-Lackland, Texas, January 2014
* A flight is the smallest organizational unit in the U.S. Air Force. At Lackland there were 50 trainees in each flight, occupying two sleeping bays of each dormitory.
Flight-level* risk category criteria used in an assessment of rabies exposure risk among U.S. Air Force basic trainees — Joint Base San Antonio (JBSA)-Lackland, Texas, January 2014
| Risk category | Category criteria |
|---|---|
| High | Vast majority (>75%) of the flight woke up to find one or more bats in the sleeping bay |
| Moderate | A proportion (1%–75%) of the flight woke up to find one or more bats in the sleeping bay |
| Low | No one in the flight woke up to find a bat in the sleeping bay |
A flight is the smallest organizational unit in the U.S. Air Force. At Lackland there were 50 trainees in each flight, occupying two sleeping bays of a dormitory.