If there is any chance that the bat had
contact with a person or pet or if the bat is found in the house the most important thing you can do is to
capture the bat and have it tested for rabies. Call the Westchester
County Department of Health at (914) 813-5000 for advice on what to do next.
If you are certain that
there was no contact with a person or pet (i.e., only if you saw the bat fly
in the house and never lost sight of it), close the room and closet doors,
open the windows and watch the bat until it leaves.
How do you capture a bat?
The safest way to capture a bat is to use the services of an
Licensed
- Registered Trappers
or police officer.
If you decide to capture the bat yourself, be extremely cautious to minimize
the risk of further exposure:
Turn on room
lights and close the windows.
Close the room
and closet doors.
Wait for the bat
to land.
Wearing gloves,
place a coffee can, pail or similar container over the bat.
Slide a piece of
cardboard under the container to trap the bat.
Firmly hold the
cardboard in place against the top of the container, turn it right
side up and tape the
cardboard tightly to the container.
For more detailed
information, see also the Centers for Disease Control.
After the bat is
captured.....
If there is any chance that contact with a person or pet
occurred, or you are not sure if contact occurred, DO NOT release the bat.
Call the Westchester County Department of Health at (914) 813-5000 to
arrange for the bat to be tested for rabies. The majority of bats in
Westchester County are not rabid; thus by having the bat tested for rabies,
you may spare your family from the need for rabies shots.
Rabies post exposure
treatment should be considered if the bat....
is found to be
rabid;
is not available
for testing;
was untestable;
AND
there was physical
contact with a person where a bite or scratch or contamination of any open
wound or mucous membrane (eye, nose, mouth) could not be ruled out: a bat
bite may be difficult or impossible to recognize.
even in the absence
of known physical contact, where the bat may have had access to:
an unattended young child;
a sleeping individual;
a person under the influence of alcohol or drugs;
a person with other sensory or mental impairment. |