76
Mostly True
Global
The text states that survival after being shot in the head is more likely than after rabies infection.
The claim compares the survival rates of being shot in the head to rabies infection. Rabies, once symptomatic, is almost universally fatal in humans unless treated promptly before symptoms appear. Survival from headshots depends greatly on specifics like location and medical response. Existing evidence indicates rabies has a nearly 100% fatality rate once symptoms appear, whereas survival rates for headshots vary. Therefore, the claim that survival from headshots is more likely than from rabies infection is generally supported. However, specific survival rates for head injuries are complex and situation-dependent.
Individual Claims
76
Mostly True
Health
A person is more likely to survive after being shot in the head than after being infected with rabies.
Evidence indicates that rabies is almost invariably fatal once symptomatic, whereas survival from headshots varies but is possible. Sources like Scientific American discuss rare cases of rabies survival under exceptional circumstances, suggesting near-zero survival after symptoms emerge. Meanwhile, headshot survival rates, though low, depend on multiple factors such as the injury location and medical treatment. Thus, generally, surviving a headshot is considered more likely than surviving rabies once symptoms occur.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
85
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
75
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
80
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
76
Evidence Summary
No specific fact-check found, but web sources indicate rabies is nearly always fatal once symptomatic, whereas headshot survival is possible.