The Atlantic

America Has a Rabid-Raccoon Problem

For decades, the government has been carrying out an ambitious plan to mass vaccinate the wild animals by airplane.
Source: Rolf Nussbaumer / Alamy

The story of America’s rabid raccoons begins in Florida. Rabies was once rarely found in raccoons, but in the ’50s, an outbreak began spreading from the Sunshine State. It diffused first to neighboring states and then made a great leap north into the mid-Atlantic, possibly via the shipment of over to hunting preserves in Virginia. From there, rabid raccoons ambled their way as far north as Canada and as far west as Ohio. The East Coast became “one solid belt of raccoon rabies,” says Charles Rupprecht, the former chief of the CDC’s rabies program.

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