A rabies case involving a 10-month-old dog in Curry County is more than an isolated public health incident. It is a reminder that the boundaries people trust to keep them from danger, even a fenced backyard, offer little protection against a virus that silently moves through wildlife.
The unvaccinated dog was euthanized after testing positive for rabies when it displayed signs of distress and aggression. It became the second dog in New Mexico to contract the disease in the last 10 months.
The animal has bitten one person and is undergoing post-exposure treatment. Five others exposed to the dog received preventive vaccination, officials said.
But the deeper story goes beyond a single infected animal. Even pets in a fenced yard are not free from risk due to bats, skunks, and foxes that move at the periphery of human settlement. That illusion of separation has always been fragile.
Rabies in the American landscape is rare in humans because of vaccination and surveillance. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 9 in 10 animal cases are still in wildlife. Healthcare providers treat 1.4 million Americans every year for possible rabies exposure. They also administer post-exposure prophylaxis to 100,000 people.
In New Mexico alone, health officials confirmed 13 rabid animals in 2025, following 12 cases the year before. Mostly involved in wildlife, particularly bats. But the lesson of the Curry County dog is that the line between wild and domestic is more porous than many pet owners expect.
Backyards, after all, do not stop a bat from descending at twilight. But health officials described the case as preventable. The dog received no vaccination despite the state law requiring rabies shots for dogs and cats. That detail matters. Rabies is among the few diseases where prevention is essential: Once symptoms appear, survival is almost nil.
“Rabies vaccines are an invisible but strong barrier against this deadly disease,” said Dr. Erin Phipps, state public health veterinarian for the New Mexico Department of Health (NMDOH).
The incident also exposes a larger public health irony: the success of rabies control has made the danger easier to overlook. As cases in humans become rare, urgency fades. But that rarity does not signal absence.
Officials asked residents to avoid unfamiliar animals, report suspicious wildlife behavior, and seek immediate medical help after bites or even exposure to saliva. They reminded the public that bats found in bedrooms, particularly where children are present, may warrant precautionary treatment even without a visible bite.
Such guidance can sound routine until a case like this makes it feel urgent again.
The death of one unvaccinated puppy in rural New Mexico may not signal an emergency. But it does point to a quieter truth about public safety: some protections work only when people believe in them enough to maintain them.
A fence can mark a boundary. And a vaccine can save lives. But only one of them keeps rabies out.
