Jw. Krebs et al., RABIES SURVEILLANCE IN THE UNITED-STATES DURING 1994, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 207(12), 1995, pp. 1562-1575
In 1994, 48 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico reported
8,224 cases of rabies in nonhuman animals and 6 cases in human beings
to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Nearly 93% (7,632
cases) were wild animals, whereas 7% (592 cases) were domestic species
. The total number of reported cases decreased 13.4% from that of 1993
(9,498 cases), with most of the decline resulting from 19.2% fewer ca
ses of rabies in raccoons. Two previously described epizootics of rabi
es involving the raccoon variant of the rabies virus have converged in
North Carolina, and the resulting region is now continuous from Alaba
ma and Florida in the South to Maine in the North. Epizootics of rabie
s in foxes in west central Texas and in dogs and coyotes in southern T
exas continue to expand, with this state reporting 144 rabid foxes, 53
rabid dogs, and 77 of the 85 cases in coyotes during 1994. Maine and
New Hampshire reported cases of rabies in foxes (6 and 9, respectively
) for the first time in 10 years. Nationally, reported cases of rabies
in dogs (153) increased by 17.7%, whereas cases in cattle (111) and c
ats (267) decreased by 14.6 and 8.3%, respectively. Cats continued to
be the domestic animal most frequently reported rabid. Twenty-eight st
ates and the District of Columbia reported decreases in rabies in anim
als in 1994, compared with 22 states, the District of Columbia, and Pu
erto Rico in 1993. Hawaii and Nebraska were the only states that did n
ot report cases of rabies in 1994.