Hundreds may have been exposed to rabies at bat-infested cabins in Grand
Teton National Park
[August 16, 2025]
By SEJAL GOVINDARAO and MEAD GRUVER
Health officials are working to alert hundreds of people in dozens of
states and several countries who may have been exposed to rabies in
bat-infested cabins in Wyoming's Grand Teton National Park over the past
few months.
As of Friday, none of the bats found in some of the eight linked cabins
at Jackson Lake Lodge had tested positive for rabies.
But the handful of dead bats found and sent to the Wyoming State
Veterinary Laboratory in Laramie for testing were probably only a small
sample of the likely dozens that colonized the attic above the row of
cabins, Wyoming State Health Officer Dr. Alexia Harrist said.
Other bats weren't killed but got shooed out through cabin doors and
windows. Meanwhile, the vast majority never flapped down from the attic
into living spaces.
Health officials thus deemed it better safe than sorry to alert
everybody who has stayed in the cabins recently that they might have
been exposed by being bitten or scratched. Especially when people are
sleeping, a bat bite or scratch can go unseen and unnoticed.
“What we’re really concerned about is people who saw bats in their rooms
and people who might have had direct contact with a bat,” Harrist said
Friday.

The cabins have been unoccupied, with no plans to reopen, since
concessionaire Grand Teton Lodge Company discovered the bat problem July
27.
Bats are a frequent vector of the rabies virus. Once symptoms occur —
muscle aches, vomiting, itching, to name a few — rabies is almost always
fatal in humans.
The good news is a five-shot prophylactic regimen over a two-week period
soon after exposure is highly effective in preventing illness, Harrist
noted.

The cabins opened for the summer season in May after being vacant over
the winter. Based on the roughly 250 reservations through late July,
health officials estimated that up to 500 people had stayed in the
cabins.
They were trying to reach people in 38 states and seven countries
through those states' health agencies and, in the case of foreign
visitors, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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The exterior Jackson Lake Lodge is seen in Moran, Wy., Aug. 25,
2023. (AP Photo/Amber Baesler, File)
 Others who have not been alerted yet
but stayed in cabins 516, 518, 520, 522, 524, 526, 528 and 530 this
year should tell health officials or a doctor immediately, Harrist
said.
Health officials were recommending prophylactic shots for people who
fit certain criteria, such as deep sleepers who found a bat in their
room, and children too young to say that they had seen a bat.
The Wyoming Department of Health had no ongoing concern about
visitor safety at the Jackson Lake Lodge area. That includes a
Federal Reserve economic policy symposium Aug. 21-23 that takes
place at Jackson Lake Lodge every summer.
“The lodge company has done a fantastic job of doing their due
diligence of making sure everyone that is coming in for that, and
for all other visits this year, are going to be as safe as
possible,” said Emily Curren, Wyoming’s public health veterinarian.
“Three or four” dead bats from the cabins tested negative and one
that was mangled did not have enough brain tissue to be testable,
Curren said.
All were brown bats, which come in two species: “little” and “big,”
with the larger ones more than twice as big. Officials were unsure
which species these were, but both are common in Wyoming.
They typically live in colonies of 30 to 100 individuals, Curren
said.
“That’s a lot of bats that we cannot rule out a risk of rabies being
in,” Curren said. “There’s no way for us to know for certain about
every single bat that got into these rooms.”
There are no plans to exterminate the bats, Grand Teton National
Park spokesperson Emily Davis said. Devices fitted to the building
were keeping the bats from getting back in after flying out in
pursuit of insects to eat, they said.
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