Virginia Health District Confirms Three Rabid Animals
Summary
The Central Virginia Health District confirmed three rabid animals (one raccoon, two skunks) between March 6-9, 2026, with potential contact with dogs. The notice reminds residents of Virginia's rabies vaccination laws for pets and advises on avoiding wild animals.
What changed
The Virginia Department of Health (VDH) issued a notice confirming three cases of rabies in animals (a raccoon and two skunks) within the Central Virginia Health District between March 6 and March 9, 2026. The affected animals were found in Bedford County and Campbell County, and all had known or suspected contact with dogs. No human exposure has been reported.
This notice serves as a public health reminder regarding rabies prevention. It reiterates Virginia law requiring dogs and cats four months and older to be vaccinated against rabies. Residents are advised to avoid contact with wild or stray animals, ensure pets are vaccinated, teach children about animal safety, and report all animal bites to local authorities. The VDH provides resources for rabies information and local health department locations.
What to do next
- Ensure all dogs and cats four months of age and older are vaccinated for rabies as required by Virginia law.
- Educate household members, especially children, on avoiding contact with wild or stray animals.
- Report all animal bites to local animal control or the local health department.
Source document (simplified)
March 11, 2026
Media Contact: Kim Foster, kimberlee.foster@vdh.virginia.gov
Central Virginia Health District Confirms Three Rabid Animals
Lynchburg, Va. – The Central Virginia Health District has received confirmation of three rabid animals located in the district between March 6 and March 9, including a rabid raccoon on Crestview Drive in the Forest area of Bedford County. Also, two rabid skunks have been reported in Campbell County, one on Suburban Road and another on Bethany Road. All the rabid animals had known or suspected contact with dogs. There is no known human exposure among the three incidents.
Rabies is caused by a virus that attacks the nervous system and is lethal if proper medical care is not given following an exposure to the virus. The most common source of exposure to rabies is a bite by a rabid animal. Rabies may also be transmitted by saliva from a rabid animal contacting open wounds, the mouth, eyes or nose. All animal bites should be reported to the local animal control officers or to the local health department to ensure proper follow-up for rabies prevention.
Everyone should take commonsense measures to protect themselves and their domestic animals from rabies. Pet owners should keep their pets up to date on their rabies vaccinations. Virginia law requires that all dogs and cats four months of age and older be vaccinated for rabies by a licensed veterinarian, and that vaccinations be kept current. It is important to avoid contact with wild or stray animals, and parents should be sure that their children are taught not to touch, pet, or otherwise handle unknown animals.
Steps that can be taken to prevent rabies in people and pets include:
• Be sure that your pets are up to date on their rabies vaccinations.
• Avoid contact with wild animals or stray animals.
• Do not feed stray animals. Avoid wild animals, especially raccoons, bats, foxes and skunks. Feed your pets indoors and do not let them wander.
• Teach children to avoid contact with wild animals and pets they are not familiar with.
• Do not handle sick, injured or dead animals. Contact a licensed wildlife rehabber if you have concerns
about sick or injured wildlife.
• Keep wild animals out of homes by capping chimneys with screens and blocking openings in attics, cellars and porches. Ensure trash cans have tight fitting lids.
• Do not try to trap or handle stray and wild animals. If a bat is found indoors and may have had contact with someone, do not release it. Call your local animal control officer or health department to determine if the animal should be picked up and tested for rabies.
• Report all bites to people to the local health department for investigation.
If you are bitten by a wild or stray animal do not panic. Wash the wound(s) thoroughly with warm
soapy water and contact animal control, your doctor or the health department for further
recommendations. https://www.vdh.virginia.gov/central-virginia/health-department-locations/
For more information about rabies, https://www.vdh.virginia.gov/animal-contact-human-health/rabiescontrol/.
Last Updated: March 13, 2026
Related changes
Source
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get Drug Safety alerts
Weekly digest. AI-summarized, no noise.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when VA Dept of Health Newsroom publishes new changes.