Veterinarians: To report an
animal that you suspect to be rabid, click
here.
Why Report Animal Diseases? Animal disease
reports are essential for tracking diseases in our
county. Many animal diseases can also infect
people. Veterinary Public Health uses these
reports to better understand where and when diseases are
occurring locally. This information is used to
educate veterinarians and physicians to better protect
the health of animals and people.
Animal bites
to people, and wild mammal contacts to domestic
animals are also reportable. Rodent and rabbit bites
are not reportable. To read more about bite
reporting, click here.
Who
Should Report? Anyone
may report an animal disease. Veterinarians, animal
shelter workers, and veterinary technicians have the
most knowledge about local animal diseases and they
report most often. However, any member of the public may
report.
What to Report?
1. Rabid Animals - animals suspected of having
rabies
2. Animal bites to people - all animals except except
rodents, squirrels, and rabbits
3. Bat contact - any direct contact between a bat and a
person or pet/livestock.
4. Wild mammal bites - any potential bite from a wild
mammal to a person or pet/livestock
5. Dead birds and tree squirrels (for West Nile Virus testing)
6. Outbreak - Many animals becoming ill around the same
time and place
7. Animals/Humans sick with same symptoms, same location
8. Animal diseases not native to area
or unusual animal diseases
9. Any disease in this list:
List of Reportable Animal Diseases, 2010
How to Report?
Choose one of three ways:
-
Call our office at
(213) 989-7060 or
(877) 747-2243 (in LA County)
-
Download form (pdf), print
out, complete, fax in.
Follow the link below.
Animal Disease and Bite
Report Forms.
-
Online reporting general use reporting portals
You will be asked to fill out a form on a secure website. You will be prompted by your computer to accept a security alert when you access the form. Click Yes to proceed.
Online Public Reporting
Portal |
Online Reporting
Portal for Professionals