No. Contact with the dead animal is necessary, usually with its saliva. (And, of course, the animal has to have been already infected with rabies. Contact with a non-infected dead animal will not give you rabies.)
No, but there is risk if the bacteria from the cow enters into an open wound or sore or even gets in the eyes or mouth of the person if the dead animal is being handled improperly.
When you boil the milk of such cow, it will not transmit the rabies. Drinking raw milk should be taken very seriously and you need to take complete immunization for rabies.
No. You have to eat it or be bitten by the animal.
Yes. There are rabies vaccines for cattle.
ofcourse. better to take vaccine
No. Rabies is caused by the rabies virus (it is therfore an infection), which is carried in the saliva of an infected animal. To become infected an animal needs to be bitten by an infected animal.
No. A dog can only get rabies from contact with a rabies-infected animal.
No it is not! You would need to be directly infected to catch Rabies.
Rabies is normally transmitted by the bite of an animal infected with it
Hopefully never. You should never give a cow rabies, if you can help it.
Yes, horses can become infected with rabies. This is why your horse should be vaccinated against rabies every year, since your horse can become infected with and die from rabies.
Humans can get rabies from an infected animal (if it bites them)
if you get bitten by a dog with rabies you might get them
Yes. Any mammal can transmit rabies if it is infected.
Dogs get rabies from being bitten by another animal that is already infected.
Rabies is usually transmitted through the bite of an infected animal.