Three people in the United States died from rabies. A field report documents these deaths, which were all linked to exposures to bats. The report doesn't provide details about the specific circumstances of each exposure or the timeline of their illnesses, but it confirms the fatal outcome in each case.
This is a stark reminder that rabies is almost always fatal once symptoms appear. The virus is carried by bats and other mammals in the U.S. While human cases are rare, each one is a tragedy because rabies is preventable with prompt medical care after an exposure.
The report simply tells us these three deaths happened and were attributed to rabies from bats. It's a field report, not a large study, so we don't know how representative these cases are or what might have been done differently. It doesn't discuss any new treatments or changes in risk. Its power is in the sobering fact: rabies still kills.