a. Do not release any unwanted family pets into the wild. Find them a home or turn them over to a local SPCA facility or animal shelter. This includes keeping cats inside where they will not encounter rabid animals that may attack them.
b. Educate yourself and all members of your family about rabies. In particular, warn young children never to get close to animals that appear sick or any wild animal that approaches them or does not quickly move away in their presence. Healthy wild animals avoid humans and scamper away. However, this does not mean that when you are unsuccessful in finding the suspect animal after the contact was brought to your attention the animal is not rabid. It could have slowly wandered off.
c. Be sure you know what telephone number in your area to call when you
spot an animal that you suspect is sick.
Sources: AHEAD project archives and Zoonoses: Recognition, Control and Prevention, Hugh-Jones, Hubbert and Hagstad, University of Iowa Press, 1995