Every year on September 28, the world observes World Rabies Day to raise awareness about rabies prevention, promote vaccination efforts, and push toward a future where no one dies from this preventable disease. This date marks the death anniversary of Louis Pasteur, who developed the first rabies vaccine.
What is World Rabies Day?
World Rabies Day is an international campaign coordinated by the Global Alliance for Rabies Control and backed by the United Nations and major health organisations like WHO. The day focuses on both human and animal rabies, aiming to prevent deaths, strengthen animal vaccination programmes, and educate communities about post-exposure treatment.
When is World Rabies Day?
This annual observance takes place every September 28. In 2026, that date falls on a Sunday. Around this time, health organisations, veterinary agencies, schools, and community groups run vaccination drives, awareness events, and educational workshops.
Why World Rabies Day Matters
Rabies is almost always fatal once symptoms appear, but it is entirely preventable. Over 59,000 people die each year—mainly in Africa and Asia—and nearly 40 percent of victims are children under 15. Most cases result from dog bites. World Rabies Day highlights that with coordinated vaccination, community education, and improved access to post-exposure prophylaxis, disease elimination is possible.
How to Get Involved
- Vaccinate pets: Make sure dogs and cats are up to date on their rabies vaccines and encourage others in your community to do the same.
- Support local campaigns: Join or donate to vaccination clinics, school education programs, or community awareness events.
- Share prevention tips: Use platforms and community groups to spread knowledge about avoiding animal bites, proper wound care, and the need for prompt medical attention.
- Encourage policy action: Advocate for government support for national rabies control plans and better access to vaccines and post-exposure treatment.
- Use awareness tools: Share infographics, posters, and campaign messages, using hashtags like #WorldRabiesDay and #ZeroBy30.
History of World Rabies Day
The first awareness campaign was launched in 2007 and coordinated by the Global Alliance for Rabies Control alongside the CDC, WHO, OIE, and PAHO. In 2009, the Global Alliance shifted the date to September 28 to honour Louis Pasteur. Since then, millions have been reached through educational drives and pet vaccinations worldwide.
Noteworthy Facts
- Rabies kills an estimated 59,000 people annually—mostly in low-income countries.
- Almost 99 percent of human rabies cases stem from dog bites.
- The disease is preventable through timely pet vaccination and access to post-exposure treatment.
- World Rabies Day unites communities, governments, vets, and health workers in the shared goal of ending dog-mediated rabies by 2030.
- The 2026 campaign encourages everyone to take personal and community action for real impact.
Hashtags
#WorldRabiesDay, #ZeroBy30, #RabiesPrevention
Links
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