Secondly, you were injured by a cat's paw, not bitten. Rabies virus is an anaerobic virus, and ultraviolet rays in sunlight are fatal to it, so rabies virus basically exists in the saliva of animals when it attacks. If a cat wants to infect you, first the cat will have a rabies attack, then it will just lick its paw, and then it will scratch your skin with this newly licked paw and bleed, so you have a chance to be infected. In addition to this situation, simple scratches will not be infected with rabies.
So the probability that your cat carries rabies virus itself is very, very small, and the probability that it can spread diseases in a way that hurts you is also very small. It's almost impossible for you to get rabies when you add the two, so why do you want an injection? Of course, if you really don't feel at ease, you can also have an injection and keep the cat at home for 10 days. /kloc-within 0/0 days, the cat will not die of rabies, so there is no need to take the rest of the injections.
Get scratched by a cat and get an injection. It depends. Although many animals are infected with rabies virus, cats are really rare. In addition, rabies is a strictly controlled disease in China, so you don't have to scare yourself.
Yes or no.
To the specific situation, specific analysis.
In case one, if your cat is domesticated and healthy, and has been vaccinated since childhood, there is no special reaction within one week of being scratched, so don't worry.
The second situation is that it has not been vaccinated, not domestic, other people's, and stray cats. They are not sure whether they are healthy or not. They are injured and bleeding. It's best to get vaccinated.
The incubation period of rabies is as long as 6 years. Just because it was ok at first doesn't mean it won't work in the future.
To be on the safe side, take a vaccination.
Situation 3: The cat has been vaccinated, but you are in poor health and your resistance is relatively low. To be on the safe side, you should also be vaccinated!