Yesterday, while I was feeding a dog, it sneezed near me.
Today, I am noticing that the dog is behaving unusually like not eating sneezing making unusual sounds..
I am not sure whether the sneeze went into my eyes, nose, or mouth. It's face was not towards me but i was sitting down and giving food.It was atleast 2m away from me..The sneeze was a minor one
Therefore, I am worried that it might cause rabies.Will it cause rabies?
Answers (17)
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I get why this worried you — but based on what you described, this does NOT cause rabies.
Rabies is not spread by sneezing, air droplets, or a dog being a few meters away. It requires a bite, scratch, or direct saliva contact on a fresh wound or clearly into eyes/nose/mouth in sufficient amount. A minor sneeze from ~2 meters, especially when the dog wasn’t facing you, doesn’t meet that criteria.
The dog’s current behavior (sneezing, not eating, unusual sounds) is far more consistent with a routine respiratory issue in dogs, not rabies.
Next Steps
• No vaccine or treatment is required for this incident
• Wash face/eyes as routine hygiene and move on
• Observe the dog if possible; rabies does not present like this initially
Health Tips
Rabies anxiety is very common and understandable. A short, focused consultation helps separate real risk from perceived risk and saves you from unnecessary stress and medical steps. If this worry keeps looping, it’s worth closing it properly with one conversation.
No — this situation does not cause rabies.
Rabies is not transmitted by:
• A dog sneezing from 2 meters away
• Sneeze droplets in the air (even if some reached your face)
• No bite, no scratch, no direct saliva contact with broken skin or mucous membranes
The virus is present in high amounts only in saliva and needs to enter through a fresh wound or directly onto mucous membranes (eyes/nose/mouth) in sufficient quantity. A minor sneeze from 2 meters (even if the dog is facing somewhat toward you) is far too diluted and distant to transmit rabies.
The dog’s current symptoms (not eating, sneezing, unusual sounds) are much more likely to be a common respiratory infection (kennel cough, viral upper respiratory infection, allergies, or something else) than rabies. Rabies in dogs usually shows severe neurological signs first (aggression, paralysis, fear of water, drooling, difficulty swallowing), not primarily sneezing and loss of appetite.
Next Steps
• You do NOT need rabies vaccine, booster, or immunoglobulin for this exposure — it is classified as no risk / negligible risk by WHO and CDC guidelines.
• For the dog: Inform the owner (if stray — report to local animal control or municipality). Observe from a distance if possible. If the dog shows clear rabies signs (aggressive change, paralysis, foaming mouth, inability to drink), animal authorities should handle it — not you.
• If you develop any unusual symptoms in the coming weeks (fever, wound-like sensation at old bite sites, neurological changes), see a doctor — but these would be unrelated to this sneeze incident.
Health Tips
• Rabies anxiety after very low-risk contacts is extremely common — your mind is trying to protect you, but medically this is safe.
• Continue normal life: no need to avoid the dog area or change habits because of this.
• For peace of mind: If worry stays high, speak to a doctor or do a quick online consult — they will confirm zero risk and help reduce anxiety so you can focus better.
You are completely safe from rabies from this event.
Take care
Need few more details for proper understanding of your issue.
You can consult with me online on Practo or whatsapp on eight three one eight four six nine eight eight six for proper diagnosis, conclusion and management
No it will not cause. It is rare of the rarest. That from. A sneeze. Anyone got rabies. WAS IT A Stray dog. If you are getting anxious from that. You can get vaccine. There is no issue in that. If you still get vaccinations
If you want to discuss your problem in more detail, feel free to message me on WhatsApp at nine one one nine two five five six nine nine for a detailed free discussion
Disclaimer : The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
Disclaimer : The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
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