The zoonotic bacterial disease is often spread through tick and deer fly bites.
Fox News reports:
Caused by the bacteria Francisella tularensis, the disease commonly infects rabbits, hares and rodents. However, it is zoonotic, which means it can spread from animals to humans.
The bacteria is a “tier-1 select agent,” a classification given to agents and toxins that “present the greatest risk of deliberate misuse with significant potential for mass casualties or devastating effects to the economy, critical infrastructure or public confidence, and pose a severe threat to public health and safety,” per the CDC.
Although tularemia is relatively rare, with only 2,462 diagnoses between 2011 and 2022, cases have risen 56% compared to the prior decade (2001 to 2010), as reported in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
“Increased reporting of probable cases might be associated with an actual increase in human infection, improved tularemia detection or both,” the CDC report says.
Symptoms can include myalgia, chest discomfort, cough, severe sore throat, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, chills, headache, malaise, fatigue, and anorexia.
According to the CDC, the most common form of the disease causes “a skin ulcer” at the site “where the bacteria entered the body. The ulcer is accompanied by swelling of regional lymph glands, usually in the armpit or groin.” […]
— Read More: www.thegatewaypundit.com
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Usually when rabbits get a fever the cages bounce around violently for a short time and a few weeks later more bunnies have appeared, a lot more! As anyone who has raised rabbits can tell you.
Now if that is the kind of rabbit fever they’re talking about, then what I’d say about that fever is too dirty to type here.