We have an easy rabies vaccine for various animals. Why not humans?

nod
Which is why ISIS apparently plotting to unleash The Plague at some point is/was so amusing and comically inept; because it’s a pretty hard to transmit disease to begin with that comes with a variety of very obvious tell-tale signs, takes a long while to do anything, can only really spread when lots of people are packed up in really unsanitary and downright medieval conditions (i.e. nowhere in the West)… and is easily cured away anyway.

But then I guess people with medieval sensibilities gotta stick to medieval plots. And I guess it makes for great scaremongering headlines, too. Everybody wins sigh.

Yep. A friend of mine worked in rabies research at the Wistar Institute. The human rabies vaccine is indistinguishable from the canine vaccine, other than the label. Liability costs are responsible for the huge price difference.

Yep. I know of people who don’t get any vaccines for their pets, because the pets don’t leave the yard. Well, neither does mine- but he still got bitten by something and I didn’t know until the bite got infected and therefore didn’t get him to the vet until a few days later. If his rabies shot hadn’t been up to date, he would have been quarantined for a few months.

It took me a while to find it, but here’s the Straight Dope Staff Report by Jill, who is an honest-to-god epidemiologist: Why do dogs get vaccinated against rabies but not people?

I heard a recent podcast (maybe?) talking about rabies. I’m too lazy to look up the particular episode, but I remember 2 [DEL]facts[/DEL] pieces of information from the episode.

  1. by the time rabies symptoms appear, you’re toast. Shots won’t help anymore.

  2. there was a new radical treatment for you – although it is controversial, and has a less than 50% survival rate.

J.

Liability costs is right.

There is a vaccine for Lyme disease available for dogs, but it is not being made available for humans even though there is an obvious market for it.