11-year-old boy in Canada dies from rabies after waking up with a bat on his face

After an 11-year-old boy died of rabies, doctors are urging the public to seek medical attention following exposure to bats, even when no obvious scratches or bite marks are visible.

A silver-haired bat lies on a log.
A silver-haired bat, photographed in southern Minnesota. Silver-haired bats are responsible for the majority of rabies cases in Canada. It is unclear what species was involved in this incident.
(Image credit: Stan Tekiela Author / Naturalist / Wildlife Photographer/Getty Images)

An 11-year-old boy in Ontario, Canada, has died after being bitten by a rabid bat that was resting on his face as he slept. The boy had no obvious bite or scratch marks and didn't show symptoms for the first 19 days after the incident, his doctors report.

While on vacation with his parents at a cottage in northern Ontario in 2024, the boy was woken up in the night by a bat on his nose and mouth, according to a report published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal on June 29. His father caught the bat in a cooking pot and released it outside, and because the child had no visible injuries and the bat did not seem to be particularly aggressive, his parents decided not to seek a medical assessment, the report noted.

Pandora Dewan
Trending News Editor

Pandora is the trending news editor at Live Science. She is also a science presenter and previously worked as Senior Science and Health Reporter at Newsweek. Pandora holds a Biological Sciences degree from the University of Oxford, where she specialised in biochemistry and molecular biology.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.