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BREAKING NEWS Alert as UK woman dies from terrifying rabies - health chiefs warn of vital yet little-known prevention tactic
BREAKING NEWS Alert as UK woman dies from terrifying rabies - health chiefs warn of vital yet little-known prevention tactic

Daily Mail​

time21 hours ago

  • Health
  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS Alert as UK woman dies from terrifying rabies - health chiefs warn of vital yet little-known prevention tactic

Britain was today rocked by fresh rabies fears after a woman died after catching the virus while on holiday in Morocco. Officials revealed the unnamed individual contracted the illness following contact with a stray dog. But it was only after they returned to Yorkshire and The Humber that they were diagnosed with the virus. UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) bosses are now racing to get in touch with any close contacts of the woman. There have been less than 10 cases of human rabies associated with animal exposures abroad reported in the UK since 2000. However, the UKHSA today stressed there was 'no risk to the wider public' given there is 'no documented evidence of rabies passing between people'. The UK has been rabies-free since 1922, when the last indigenous non-fatal case was recorded, with the exception of rabies-like viruses in some wild bat species. The last bite death caused by rabies in a UK animal was in 1902, but was brought back to Britain in animals returning with soldiers from the First World War. Dog licensing, euthanasia of stray dog and quarantining were credited with killing off the virus. Western Europe is now considered low risk by the World Health Organisation, while countries in Eastern Europe are listed as 'moderate risk' and African and Middle Eastern countries are 'high risk'. Popular tourist destinations like Egypt, Tunisia and Turkey all carry a high risk of dogs transmitting rabies to people. Dr Katherine Russell, Head of Emerging Infections and Zoonoses, at the UKHSA said: 'I would like to extend my condolences to this individual's family at this time. 'If you are bitten, scratched or licked by an animal in a country where rabies is found then you should wash the wound or site of exposure with plenty of soap and water and seek medical advice without delay in order to get post-exposure treatment to prevent rabies. 'There is no risk to the wider public in relation to this case. 'Human cases of rabies are extremely rare in the UK, and worldwide there are no documented instances of direct human to human transmission.' The last recorded rabies death in the UK was in 2018, when Omar Zouhri, a 58-year-old kebab shop worker, was bitten by a cat while visiting family in Mehdya, Morocco. The same rabid cat is believed to have also bitten a young girl in the area, but she was treated locally for the nip and made a full recovery. An inquest in Oxford heard that Mr Zouhri had contracted rabies on August 31 2018, but it was not until as late as October 28 that 'the die was cast' when he started to report symptoms of 'furious rabies'. This included itching, pain and muscle twitches - which showed the virus had already entered his central nervous system, rendering any treatment ineffective and sealing his fate. Mr Zouhri, from Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire, died in hospital in Oxford on November 4, 2018.

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