The Wyoming Department of Health has reached out to hundreds of people they believe may have been exposed to rabies during their stay at a Grand Teton National Park lodge over the last four months when a bat colony infected with the disease was discovered in the attic.
They say they still need to reach hundreds more, and the sooner the better.Â
No cases of rabies have emerged since health officials started an international effort to reach patrons over thecolony of bats that was sharing space in the lodgeâs attic.
They say they are doing their due diligence to monitor the health of everyone who might have been exposed because of the serious nature of the disease.
Health officials estimate around 500 people stayed in one of eight attached cabins at Jackson Lake Lodge between May 5 and July 27. During that time, some of those people may have had direct contact with a bat, even if they werenât aware of it.
âWe have reached out to residents of 38 states and seven countries,â Wyoming State Health Officer Dr. Alexia Harrist told Cowboy State Daily. âWe've been able to connect to all states that have residents who stayed in those cottages to have them do risk assessments (for rabies exposure), and we're focused on making sure those risk assessments get completed right now.â
Because brown bats are common vectors for the rabies virus, nobodyâs taking any chances. The Grand Teton Lodge Company closed the eight cabins after multiple reports of bats in the rooms and alerted the Wyoming Department of Health of possible rabies exposure.
The Wyoming Department of Health, in conjunction with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has been working to notify and assess everyone who was potentially exposed. The risk of rabies infection from bats is low, but the consequences of inaction are lethal.
Four dead bats found in the cabins were tested for rabies at the Wyoming State Veterinary Laboratory. Harrist said three of the bats tested negative, and the fourth was too decayed to be tested.
âUnfortunately, this is one of those circumstances where we canât trap and test every single bat to confirm they donât have rabies,â she said. âItâs impossible to say there was never a rabid bat present, so we have to assume that it's possible that there was a rabid bat in there at some point and take the necessary precautions.â
Lethal But Livable
M. Brock Fenton, emeritus professor of biology at Western University in Ontario, Canada, has been a bat biologist for his entire career, studying the evolution, diversity, and social organization of bats. Heâs handled and been bitten by rabid bats, making him the last person to underestimate the risks associated with them.
âI've been exposed to and bitten by rabid bats, but I have my vaccinations. I have my protection. I don't worry about doing it, but I don't go out of my way to get bitten,â he said.
Rabies isnât transmissible through the air or on surfaces â nobody staying at the Jackson Lake Lodge could get infected by breathing the same air or sharing a space with a rabid bat (assuming any of the bats in the colony were rabid). The virus spreads through the saliva of an infected mammal, and transmission usually occurs from bites or scratches.
According to Fenton, the rabies virus kills around 60,000 people every year. Most of those deaths occur in Africa and India after people are bitten or scratched by dogs carrying the virus.
âThere was an older lady from the U.K. who was on holiday in Morocco who wanted to take the puppy back with her,â he said. âSomehow, she got scratched by the dog, she got rabies, and she died. So, if you're traveling in India or Africa, don't play with the stray dogs.â
In 2015, 77-year-old Karen Farthing of Lander became the first Wyoming resident to die from a confirmed rabies infection. A silver-haired bat had bitten her neck while she was asleep, but as neither she nor her family could find a visible bite mark, she did not receive any prophylactic rabies vaccination shots.Â
Farthing's rabies infection wasn't confirmed until she had been transferred to a hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah, in critical condition. By then, it was too late to treat her, and she died on Oct. 3, 2015.Â
Rabies is lethal, but only if itâs allowed to fester in the body. If anyone potentially exposed to rabies acts in a timely fashion, they can easily prevent their own death.
âThere are very good vaccines against rabies,â he said. âOnce you've had the vaccinations, they will test you to find out what level of protection you have in your system. If the first shots arenât working, they give you another shot. But youâve got to get the shots right away.
Rabies deaths are extremely rare in the United States and Canada. Fenton could only recall a handful of confirmed rabies deaths between the two countries in the last several years, which he credits to the effectiveness of rabies vaccinations, provided they're administered as soon as possible.
If the vaccinations aren't received in a timely fashion, no treatment will be available once the virus manifests. Harrist said rabies is "nearly universally fatal" if not caught early on, and it's a long, torturous death sentence as the body's systems shut down.
âAs soon as you show clinical symptoms of the disease, theyâre counting down on you,â Fenton said. "Seeing symptoms means it's going to kill you. Thereâs nothing you can do about it.â
Small But Serious
Bats and skunks are known to carry the rabies virus in Wyoming, but bats are the most common carriers. Thatâs why nobodyâs taking chances with the potential exposure at Jackson Lake Lodge.
According to Fenton, brown bats, like the ones found in the attic of Jackson Lake Lodge, are mostly harmless. He believes the dark, enclosed attic space would be an ideal place for a colony of bats to settle in.
âBrown bats are really small,â he said. âThey weigh around 15 grams. At this time of year, the young bats born in June are getting out and about, learning where to find food and all that sort of stuff. Theyâre not dangerous if you leave them alone.â
When startled or provoked in an enclosed space, a brown bat might bite or scratch a person in self-defense. The bites arenât large, but Fenton said that makes them more dangerous.
âThe bites are small, so you have to look carefully to see the signs of a bite,â he said. âPeople might get bitten by a bat and think itâs so small that they donât have to worry about it. That can be a deadly decision.â
Bat bites usually occur when people are trying to shoo away or capture bats when they end up somewhere they arenât wanted. However, itâs also possible for a frightened or panicked bat to bite or scratch someone while theyâre sleeping.
âPeople with the higher risk exposures would be those who had direct contact with a bat,â Harrist said. âThe bat might have bitten them or scratched them while they were sleeping in a room with a bat, so they may be less aware of a bad bite or be unable to communicate that they had that contact. Those are the folks that we're trying to identify and make recommendations for post-exposure prophylaxis.â
Fenton cautioned against taking any action to capture or remove bats. Even a small bite or scratch can be enough to transmit rabies.
âAs soon as you start grabbing the bat, trying to get rid of it, itâll bite you,â he said. âDon't try to catch them to identify them, because youâll just get bitten again. Just leave them alone.â
Prophylactic Measures
Harrist acknowledged that the Wyoming Department of Health is trying to tread a critical needle of communication regarding rabies exposure. The risk is low, but the consequences are life-threatening.
âThe overall risk is low, but rabies is nearly always a fatal disease,â she said. âPeople don't need to get that post-exposure prophylaxis if they didnât have any contact with a bat, but I think most people have questions, and weâre happy to answer those questions and talk to them about their individual circumstances to make individual recommendations.â
Brown bats eat mosquitoes, flies, beetles, and other small insects. Despite being a common vector for rabies, even in North America, they tend to avoid people and are mostly harmless to them.
Fenton said brown bats arenât dangerous if theyâre left alone. They donât have the sanguineous appetite of their Central and South American cousins, which present a much more potent threat of rabies transmission.
âIf we were having this conversation in Mexico or Brazil, I would have to bring up the business of vampire bats,â he said. âThey are pretty much model carriers of rabies because they feed on blood. That's what they have to do, but thatâs not something that happens in the United States or Canada.â
The three extant species of vampire bats have been known to bite and transmit rabies to humans. Even so, the risk of infection is still extremely low and has been reduced by the increase in rabies vaccinations in dogs and humans.
Fenton was the lead author of a 2024 paper about how bat biologists can safely protect themselves from rabies transmission while handling and studying bats. The key takeaways - preventing exposures and responding quickly and appropriately if exposed via bite or scratch - are good points for anyone to heed if they suspect a possible exposure to rabies after being bitten or scratched by a bat, skunk, or other known vector for the virus.Â
Harrist said the Wyoming Department of Health and the National Park Service have been diligent about contacting everyone potentially exposed to rabies in the Jackson Lake Lodge, despite the low risk of rabies transmission. Better to be safe than sorry.
âGetting risk assessments done has been our top priority,â she said, âbut weâre also thinking about how to make (the Jackson Lake Lodge cabins) safe for people to stay in again. More broadly, weâre thinking about rabies prevention in places like Grand Teton National Park, where people encounter wildlife.â
Itâs impossible to test every bat for rabies, so people have to suffer the consequences of potential exposure to and transmission of rabies. Fenton doesnât want anyone to be afraid of bats because they carry rabies, as itâs easy enough to avoid them and the lethal virus they may or may not be carrying.
âIt's not something to be frightened of,â he said. âThe best thing to do is not get bitten and leave bats alone, and if you do get bitten, immediately wash out the wound with water and soap, and get your shots right away. Bats arenât dangerous if you leave them alone.â
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Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.





