Rodent-Borne Diseases Humans Can Catch: Hantavirus, Leptospirosis, Plague and Rat-Bite Fever
Quick answer: Humans can catch several diseases from rodents or rodent-contaminated environments, including hantavirus, leptospirosis, plague, rat-bite fever, lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus, salmonella-related illness and others. The US EPA says rodents spread more than 35 diseases directly or indirectly.
This article is the deeper statistics sister post to our hantavirus symptoms and prevention pillar. It is designed as a useful reference table for readers, bloggers, journalists and anyone trying to understand rodent-to-human disease risk without panic.
Why rodent-borne disease matters
Rodent disease risk is not just about rare headlines. Rodents live near human food, rubbish, buildings, animal feed, sheds, garages, drains, farms, holiday cabins and storage spaces. They can contaminate surfaces before anyone sees them.
CDC’s One Health guidance says more than 6 in 10 known infectious diseases in people can spread from animals, and 3 in 4 new or emerging infectious diseases in people come from animals. Rodent-borne disease sits inside that wider zoonotic disease picture.
Rodent-borne disease statistics table
| Disease | How humans may be exposed | Key symptoms | Statistic or fact | Authority source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hantavirus | Inhaling dust contaminated with infected rodent urine, droppings, saliva or nesting material | Fever, fatigue, muscle aches, headache, gut symptoms, coughing, shortness of breath | CDC reports 890 US cases from 1993 to end of 2023, with 35% resulting in death. | CDC |
| Leptospirosis | Contact with urine from infected animals, often through contaminated water or soil | Fever, headache, chills, muscle aches, vomiting, diarrhoea, jaundice, kidney/liver complications | CDC estimates about 1 million human cases globally each year and nearly 60,000 deaths. | CDC |
| Rat-bite fever | Rat bites, scratches, handling infected rats, or contaminated food/water | Fever, vomiting, headache, muscle pain, rash, joint pain | CDC has reported a 7% to 10% case-fatality rate among untreated patients. | CDC MMWR |
| Plague | Flea bites, contact with infected tissues, or respiratory droplets in pneumonic plague | Fever, chills, swollen lymph nodes, pneumonia symptoms in pneumonic plague | WHO says untreated bubonic plague has a 30% to 60% case-fatality ratio; untreated pneumonic plague is always fatal. | WHO |
| LCMV | Exposure to rodent urine, droppings, saliva, nesting material or bites | Fever, malaise, headache, muscle aches; pregnancy risk if infected | Important for pregnant people because infection can affect the unborn baby. | CDC |
| Salmonella and GI infections | Contaminated food, water, surfaces or animal contact | Diarrhoea, cramps, fever, vomiting | Travel and animal-associated GI illness can be common and dehydration can become a problem. | CDC Yellow Book |
Direct vs indirect rodent transmission
Direct transmission
- Touching rodents
- Rodent bites or scratches
- Contact with urine, droppings, saliva or nesting material
- Breathing contaminated dust
- Touching contaminated surfaces and then touching your mouth, nose or eyes
Indirect transmission
- Fleas that have fed on infected rodents
- Ticks or mites associated with rodent environments
- Contaminated food or animal feed
- Contaminated water, floodwater or soil
Which rodent diseases are most relevant in the UK?
In the UK, the practical everyday risks are usually rodent contamination, leptospirosis risk around contaminated water or animal urine, food contamination, bites, and safe handling of pet rodents. Hantavirus infection is uncommon, but GOV.UK still recognises hantaviruses as a public-health topic.
The best prevention strategy is the same regardless of the exact disease: prevent infestation, avoid contact with rodent waste, clean safely, wash hands, store food securely and get medical help if symptoms follow a clear exposure.
How to reduce risk at home
- Seal holes around pipes, doors, vents and skirting boards.
- Keep food, pet food and bird seed in sealed containers.
- Remove clutter, cardboard and nesting spaces.
- Keep bins closed and outdoor waste areas tidy.
- Never sweep or vacuum rodent droppings dry.
- Use wet disinfection and gloves for small cleanups.
- Call pest control for heavy infestations.
Useful prevention products
- Rodent-proofing mesh and steel wool on Amazon UK
- Airtight food storage containers on Amazon UK
- Nitrile gloves on Amazon UK
- Disinfectant surface sprays on Amazon UK
Related reading
- Hantavirus Symptoms, Travel Illness Risks and Rodent-Borne Disease Stats
- Hantavirus vs Plague: Symptoms, Death Rates and Rodent Risk Compared
- How to Clean Mouse Droppings Safely
FAQs
How many diseases can rodents spread?
The US EPA says rodents spread more than 35 diseases directly or indirectly.
What is the most serious rodent-borne disease?
There is no single answer because severity depends on the disease, dose, route and treatment. Hantavirus, plague, leptospirosis and rat-bite fever can all be serious.
Can rodents spread disease without biting?
Yes. Disease can spread through urine, droppings, saliva, contaminated dust, fleas, ticks, mites, food and water.
How do I reduce rodent-borne disease risk?
Control rodents, seal entry points, store food securely, avoid dry sweeping droppings, disinfect contaminated areas and get pest control for infestations.
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