Use of PEP for all New York counties was included in the study; PEP in New York, New York, and from other states was excluded. Analyses of reasonable probability exposures, age, and sex were conducted for 1998–2002. Population data from 2000 (
During 1993–2002, a total of 6,320 bat-associated rabies exposure incidents and 11,365 PEPs were reported (
| Incidence data | No. (%) |
| 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total incidents† | 137 (100.0) | 116 (100.0) | 290 (100.0) | 527 (100.0) | 672 (100.0) | 764 (100.0) | 964 (100.0) | 924 (100.0) | 973 (100.0) | 953 (100.0) | 6,320 (100.0) |
| Bats tested† | 42 (30.7) | 43 (37.1) | 57 (19.7) | 111 (21.1) | 111 (16.5) | 116 (15.2) | 112 (11.6) | 110 (11.9) | 113 (11.6) | 124 (13.0) | 939 (14.9) |
| Bats not tested | 95 (69.3) | 73 (62.9) | 233 (80.3) | 416 (78.9) | 561 (83.5) | 648 (84.8) | 852 (88.4) | 814 (88.1) | 860 (88.4) | 829 (87.0) | 5,381 (85.1) |
| Total PEP | 184 | 131 | 440 | 968 | 1,326 | 1,512 | 1,755 | 1,641 | 1,735 | 1,673 | 11,365 |
| Average/incident | 1.3 | 1.1 | 1.5 | 1.8 | 2.0 | 2.0 | 1.8 | 1.8 | 1.8 | 1.8 | 1.8 |
| Bat rabies status | |||||||||||
| Positive† | 49 (26.6) | 17 (13.0) | 34 (7.7) | 74 (7.6) | 88 (6.6) | 111 (7.3) | 110 (6.3) | 110 (6.7) | 99 (5.7) | 98 (5.9) | 790 (7.0) |
| Negative | 6 (3.3) | 24 (18.3) | 17 (3.9) | 37 (3.8) | 36 (2.7) | 33 (2.2) | 22 (1.3) | 32 (2.0) | 21 (1.2) | 23 (1.4) | 251 (2.2) |
| Untestable | 18 (9.8) | 10 (7.6) | 34 (7.7) | 110 (11.4) | 89 (6.7) | 69 (4.6) | 74 (4.2) | 76 (4.6) | 114 (6.6) | 115 (6.9) | 709 (6.2) |
| Not tested | 111 (60.3) | 80 (61.1) | 355 (80.7) | 747 (77.2) | 1,113 (83.9) | 1,299 (85.9) | 1,549 (88.3) | 1,423 (86.7) | 1,501 (86.5) | 1,437 (85.9) | 9,615 (84.6) |
| Bat exposure type | |||||||||||
| Bite† | 43 (23.4) | 71 (54.2) | 124 (28.2) | 160 (16.5) | 188 (14.2) | 134 (8.9) | 186 (10.6) | 163 (9.9) | 150 (8.6) | 145 (8.7) | 1,364 (12.0) |
| Scratch or saliva contact | 73 (39.7) | 50 (38.2) | 102 (23.2) | 259 (26.8) | 429 (32.4) | 168 (11.1) | 147 (8.4) | 131 (8.0) | 152 (8.8) | 126 (7.5) | 1,637 (14.4) |
| Reasonable probability | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 1,145 (75.7) | 1,365 (77.8) | 1,299 (79.2) | 1,382 (79.7) | 1,367 (81.7) | 6,558 (57.7) |
| Other | 68 (37.0) | 10 (7.6) | 214 (48.6) | 549 (56.7) | 709 (53.5) | 65 (4.3) | 57 (3.2) | 48 (2.9) | 51 (2.9) | 35 (2.1) | 1,806 (15.9) |
| Bats received for rabies testing | |||||||||||
| Total | 420 (100.0) | 419 (100.0) | 386 (100.0) | 764 (100.0) | 741 (100.0) | 868 (100.0) | 923 (100.0) | 1,220 (100.0) | 1,421 (100.0) | 1,487 (100.0) | 8,649 (100.0) |
| By bat rabies status | |||||||||||
| Positive‡ | 20 (4.8) | 17 (4.1) | 19 (4.9) | 23 (3.0) | 28 (3.8) | 38 (4.4) | 34 (3.7) | 36 (3.0) | 45 (3.2) | 34 (2.3) | 294 (3.4) |
| Negative | 342 (81.4) | 375 (89.5) | 315 (81.6) | 653 (85.5) | 667 (90.0) | 769 (88.6) | 833 (90.2) | 1,112 (91.1) | 1,300 (91.5) | 1,363 (91.7) | 7,729 (89.4) |
| Untestable | 58 (13.8) | 27 (6.4) | 52 (13.5) | 88 (11.5) | 46 (6.2) | 61 (7.0) | 56 (6.1) | 72 (5.9) | 76 (5.3) | 90 (6.1) | 626 (7.2) |
| By exposure type | |||||||||||
| Bite† | 77 (18.3) | 106 (25.3) | 103 (26.7) | 118 (15.4) | 98 (13.2) | 139 (16.0) | 141 (15.3) | 131 (10.7) | 131 (9.2) | 148 (10.0) | 1,192 (13.8) |
| Nonbite§ | 343 (81.7) | 313 (74.7) | 283 (73.3) | 646 (84.6) | 643 (86.8) | 729 (84.0) | 782 (84.7) | 1,089 (89.3) | 1,290 (90.8) | 1,339 (90.0) | 7,457 (86.2) |
*PEP, human rabies postexposure prophylaxis; NA, data not collected for this time period. †Test for trend, p<0.0001. ‡Test for trend, p<0.005. §Includes scratch, saliva, and reasonable probability.
Nonbite exposures (scratch, direct and indirect contact with saliva, reasonable probability of exposure, and other unspecified exposures) accounted for 88% of PEP, with a significant increasing trend. During 1998–2002, “reasonable probability” and “bat in the bedroom” accounted for 79% and 53% of bat-associated PEP, respectively.
Rabies-positive bats accounted for 7% of PEP, with a significant decreasing trend. Untested bats accounted for 89% of the increase in PEP. Three quarters of PEP was administered for nonbite exposures to untested bats.
Of 8,244 PEPs since 1998, a total of 4,384 (53.2%) were for female patients, for whom the age-adjusted rate was 15.6 PEPs per 100,000 persons per year, compared with 14.3 for male patients (p = 0.0003). Persons
During the study period, a total of 8,649 bats were received for rabies testing with concerns reported at the time of submission about the possibility of human contact, although further epidemiologic review would not classify them all as exposure incidents (
Bats for which nonbite contacts were reported accounted for 86% of those received for testing and 93% of the increase in bats received. There was a significant increasing trend in the proportion of bats reported with nonbite contacts.
For bats not tested, encounters resulted in an average of 1.8 PEP per incident, at an estimated cost for biologics of $10.9 million based on an average of $1,136 per PEP (
Encounters with bats are fairly common in New York State. Eidson et al. reported that one-third of survey respondents reported a bat in their house, including 10% who had seen a bat in their bedroom (
Similar rabies patterns have been reported from other states and Canada. In Massachusetts the number of bats submitted for rabies testing increased substantially during 1985–2009 (
In conclusion, during PEP guideline revision, which expanded the recommendation for PEP beyond persons with known bite exposures, numbers of bats submitted for testing, reported exposure incidents, and instances of PEP administration increased significantly in New York. Although the cause of the increases cannot be definitively determined, the increases were consistent with changes in guidelines and public education. With 89% of bats confirmed as rabies negative that were submitted because of possible human contact, improving bat capture and testing should be considered as a strategy for excluding rabies exposures and thus reducing the number of PEPs administered.
We thank local health department and NYSDOH staff for reporting data, including the former Zoonoses Program and the Wadsworth Center’s Rabies Laboratory under the former direction of Charles Trimarchi.