Jw. Krebs et al., RABIES SURVEILLANCE IN THE UNITED-STATES DURING 1993, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 205(12), 1994, pp. 1695-1709
In 1993, 49 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico reported
9,495 cases of rabies in nonhuman animals and 3 cases in human beings
to the centers for Disease control and Prevention. Greater than 93% (
8,889 cases) were wild animals, whereas 6.4% (606 cases) were domestic
species. The total number of reported cases increased 9.9% over that
of 1992 (8,645 cases), with most oi the increase resulting from contin
ued spread of rabies in raccoons (37.1% increase in reported cases ove
r 1992). The 2 epizootics of rabies in raccoons (Northeastern/mid-Atla
ntic and Southeastern regions) approach convergence in North Carolina
(106 cases of rabies in 1993, compared with 49 in 1992). Maine, Rhode
Island, and Vermont remained the only New England states without repor
ted cases associated with the raccoon variant of the rabies virus. New
York reported 2,747 cases of rabies, the largest number qi cases ever
reported during a single year by any state. Increases in reported cas
es of rabies in Texas and 8 other geographically dispersed states were
attributed mainly to larger numbers of reported cases of rabies in ba
ts. Texas reported 71 oi the 74 cases in coyotes during 1993 (70 oi 75
cases in 1992). Nationally, reported cases oi rabies in dogs (130) an
d cattle (130) each decreased by 29% in 1993, whereas cats (291 cases
in 1993, compared with 290 in 1992) continued to be the domestic anima
l most frequently reported rabid. Twenty-two states and Puerto Rico re
ported decreases in rabies in animals in 1993, compared with 20 states
, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico in 1992. Hawaii was the on
ly stale that did not report a case of rabies in 1993.