American Association of Food Safety & Public Health Veterinarians
Rabies and Quarantine Protocols: Prevention, Control and Best Practices Virtual Training by Charlotte Robinson, DVM
Date/Time
2/19/2025
9:00 AM - 11:00 AM Mountain
Event Registration
Event Description

Course Description:

This course provides an understanding of rabies, with a focus on the virus, transmission, prevention, and quarantine procedures in the United States. Designed for professionals in animal control, veterinary care, and public health, it explores rabies risks, diagnostic methods, and the application of effective quarantine practices to prevent and control outbreaks.

Goals and Objectives

  • Understand Rabies in the U.S.: Learn about rabies prevalence, affected animals, and human risks.
  • Virus Propagation and Transmission: Examine how rabies spreads, its lifecycle, and transmission through various hosts.
  • Vaccination Protocols: Review vaccination practices for humans and animals, including legal guidelines.
  • Isolation and Quarantine Methods: Master proper quarantine practices for potentially infected animals, focusing on safety protocols.
  • First Aid and Testing: Learn first aid responses to bites, testing methods, and confirmatory diagnostics for rabies.

Key Topics Covered

  • Introduction to Rhabdoviruses: Understand the structure, classification, and characteristics of rabies and related viruses, including Lyssavirus and Vesiculovirus.
  • Animal Susceptibility and Transmission:
  • Susceptibility: Discuss which animals are most vulnerable to rabies (e.g., high-risk species such as dogs, raccoons, and bats).
  • Transmission: Review modes of rabies transmission, including bites, saliva, and rare occurrences like organ transplants.
  • Rabies Pathology and Incubation Periods:
  • Explore how rabies attacks the nervous system and leads to fatal brain dysfunction in most cases.
  • Discuss typical and extended incubation periods for rabies across various species.
  • Diagnostic and Laboratory Methods:
  • Diagnostic tools include PCR, serology, and post-mortem examination for Negri bodies.
  • Understand rabies testing for animals, including guidelines for quarantine and exclusion of animals with bite histories.
  • Quarantine Procedures for Rabies Risk Control:
  • Implement safe quarantine protocols for high-risk animals to prevent spread, including cage maintenance, PPE use, and safety measures.
  • Review the rationale for the 10-day quarantine period and conditions under which it is required.
  1. Vaccination Guidelines:
  • Explore varying state laws and protocols for rabies vaccination in animals and humans.
  • Learn about pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis, including vaccination schedules for at-risk humans.
  1. Human Rabies:
  • Identify common sources of human rabies exposure in the U.S., primarily from bats.
  • Review post-exposure treatment methods, focusing on wound care and prophylactic vaccination.

This course is essential for anyone involved in managing animal populations or public health, providing critical knowledge to mitigate rabies risk through understanding, prevention, and best practices in quarantine and vaccination.

For more information and to register, visit www.code3associates.org

Continuing Education Credit

Upon successful completion, students will receive a certificate of completion and become eligible to apply for continuing education credits from Colorado State University. Veterinary professionals may apply to receive Continuing Education Units (CEUs) from the CSU Veterinary Teaching Hospital.

This class is approved for Colorado Bureau of Animal Protection Agents for CE credit.


Tuition, Registration & Payment

Tuition for this class is $25.00.

About the Instructor
Currently, Dr. Robinson is an instructor with Code 3 Associates and teaches several NACA courses.  She has been acting as a consultant for animal shelters in Virginia on animal welfare, zoonotic diseases and disease control for more than fifteen years.  She was trained as a Foreign Animal Disease Diagnostician at Plum Island, NY.  She worked as the Director of Animal Welfare Programs for the State of Virginia and as Regional Veterinary Supervisor.   During that time she became interested in helping the Animal Control and welfare community by developing training programs and Animal Control Curricula.  With her background in private veterinary practice and farming, she knew how the animal control community was often expected to have very technical knowledge and expertise with little access to quality training.  While teaching at the Shenandoah Valley Criminal Justice Academy she, with the staff there, developed Animal Control training programs for ACOs and law enforcement officers.  She continues to train shelter staff and animal health technicians as well as animal control officers and offers continuing education for officers, technicians and veterinarians.

Location
Setting: Live Virtual
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