“…1,6,7 Various public health activities, including vaccination of domestic livestock and companion animals, vaccination programs targeting wildlife, and ongoing education programs, have contributed to the reduction in transmission of rabies virus from terrestrial animals to human beings. 8 However, a number of rabies cases in human beings has resulted from infection with rabies virus variants that are associated with bats, 9,10 a wildlife group difficult to target for rabies control by conventional methods. Prevention of rabies resulting from infection with bat-associated variants is further challenged by the frequent absence of known exposure histories involving a bat bite in human rabies cases.…”