When a person is bit by an animal with rabies, how long do they have (hours, days ?) to get the first of the rabies vaxxine shots for it to be effective?
Thank you
All three had a series of injections
(in the arm - much better than years ago)
and that was the end of it. If we had the forethought to keep the bat they would have had it tested first.
Better to be treated with the assumption that there could be rabies than not - the consequences are deadly.

Only one person has survived rabies EVER. So why would anyone want to sit around and think about it?
it was touch and go as to weather he might lose some fingers, but agressive i.v. antibiotics during a multiple day stay did the trick.even absent rabies the risk of infection from a bite is huge so it needs to be properly treated.
i remember my dad ending up in the hospital a couple of days after a neighbors very well cared for/healthy housecat bit his hand. within 48 hours my fathers hand and arm were swollen to the point that the skin looked like it was going to splitit was touch and go as to weather he might lose some fingers, but agressive i.v. antibiotics during a multiple day stay did the trick.
This is almost exactly what happened to me in May. I had the tiniest little nick on my hand. At lunch I watched as a red welt appeared. I went to ER. In less than 24 hours my hand and arm were swollen just like you described. I was admitted for several days of IV antibiotics.even absent rabies the risk of infection from a bite is huge so it needs to be properly treated.
i remember my dad ending up in the hospital a couple of days after a neighbors very well cared for/healthy housecat bit his hand. within 48 hours my fathers hand and arm were swollen to the point that the skin looked like it was going to splitit was touch and go as to weather he might lose some fingers, but agressive i.v. antibiotics during a multiple day stay did the trick.
Only one person has survived rabies EVER. So why would anyone want to sit around and think about it?
Was it a black woman from the Atlanta area?
Seems to ring a bell for me...


In November 2004, Jeanna Giese, a fifteen-year old girl from Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, became one of only six humans known to have survived rabies after the onset of symptoms, and the first known instance of a human surviving rabies without vaccine treatment. Giese's disease was already too far progressed for the vaccine to help, and she was considered too weak to tolerate it. Doctors at the Children's Hospital of Wisconsin in Wauwatosa, a suburb of Milwaukee, achieved her survival with an experimental treatment that involved putting the girl into a drug-induced coma, and administering a cocktail of antiviral drugs. Giese had symptoms of full-blown rabies when she sought medical help, thirty-seven days after being bitten by a bat. Her family did not seek treatment at the time because the bat seemed healthy. Jeanna regained her weight, strength, and coordination while in the hospital. She was released from the Children's Hospital of Wisconsin on January 1, 2005.

thirty-seven days after being bitten by a bat
This is almost exactly what happened to me in May. I had the tiniest little nick on my hand. At lunch I watched as a red welt appeared. I went to ER. In less than 24 hours my hand and arm were swollen just like you described. I was admitted for several days of IV antibiotics.
My doctor told me he had a patient who DIED from a paper cut in less than 48 hours. I was just lucky that I didn't wait to go to ER. My treatment (oral antibiotics first then IV) started with hours.
This happened to me on a Saturday. Had I waited until Monday to go see a doctor the outcome would not have been pretty.
Only one person has survived rabies EVER. So why would anyone want to sit around and think about it?
more than one person has survived having rabies. Only one person is recorded having survived rabies with NO treatment.
I think you mean no vaccine, not no treatment.
Before 2005, only 5 people were recorded to have survived rabies after symptoms appeared, and they'd all either been vaccinated previously or shortly after being bit.
In 2005, one person - Jeanna Giese - survived without having been vaccinated, but she was most certainly treated! She was placed in a coma and given a drug cocktail, and her treatment became known as the "Milwaukee protocol". It's not a cure. Of the next 25 patients who were treated with the Milwaukee protocol, only two survived. The protocol was then revised, more patients were treated, and two more are reported to have survived. All four suffered permanent damage to their nervous systems. Jeanna's impairment was comparatively mild and she is currently attending college.
Rabies is still considered 100 percent fatal.