About 90 elementary school students in Montana have started a series of rabies shots after a parent let them touch a dead bat that was later confirmed to be diseased.
The mother of two students gave presentations in five classrooms and allowed the kids to touch the dead bat last week. She offered each student who touched the bat a sanitary wipe.
The exposed students will receive six shots of anti-rabies vaccine.
Stevensville Elementary School officials said they will use liability insurance to pay up to $70,000 for the exposed children to be vaccinated. The overall cost could surpass $150,000.
The school has since set a policy requiring that anyone visiting the school obtain a visitor pass.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
OpenAI CEO to Share Oversight Ideas in Wake of Trump AI Order
Zurich Insurance Expands Data-Center Offering Beyond the US
Hedge Funds Are Hiring Experts in Catastrophe Risk
The Iran War Is Pushing the Global Gas Trade into the Shadows