Submitted by EmbarrassedActive4 t3_yh4ue1 in askscience
> https://www.who.int/activities/vaccinating-against-rabies-to-save-lives/rabies-vaccines
> Approximately 59 000 people die from rabies each year. The vast majority of these deaths occur in Asia and Africa. Children are at particular risk.
If children are at risk, why isn't it in the schedule for US and India children vaccinations?
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/schedules/hcp/imz/child-adolescent.html#birth-15
https://www.unicef.org/india/stories/know-your-childs-vaccination-schedule
https://immunizationdata.who.int/pages/schedule-by-country/ind.html
iayork t1_iuci24o wrote
In the US, human rabies is extremely rare, so the very small risk from the vaccine might still be higher than the avoided risk of rabies. (If there are 1 in a million serious side effects, that would still be 100 times more risky than the actual case rate.).
Note that people genuinely at high risk - veterinarians, mainly - do in fact get vaccinated, because that changes the risk calculation.
In African countries, and India, it becomes more of a cost calculation. There are almost certainly more effective ways to use that money to save lives in those countries.
If the money was available, it would almost certainly be more cost and safety effective to increase vaccination of animals - the US approach. Removing the source of human rabies, while not putting humans at any increased risk, is probably a much better approach.