Should I get a rabies shot for a bleeding hamster bite?

A bleeding hamster bite does not require a rabies vaccination.
Rabies virus storage host animals in nature mainly include dogs, foxes, wolves, jackals, skunks, raccoons, skunks, bats and so on. Animals susceptible to rabies mainly include canines, cats and pteropods.
Hamsters belong to the suborder Muridae, which are rarely infected with rabies, and there is no evidence of rabies in humans caused by such animals, so rabies vaccination is not required for a bleeding hamster bite.
If you are bitten by a hamster and bleed, you do not need to treat the wound with alcohol or povidone-iodine to disinfect it. If the area of the hamster bite is large and the wound is deep, the wound needs to be cleaned and bandaged. If necessary, you can receive tetanus vaccination to prevent tetanus.
In order to avoid bleeding from another hamster bite, you need to be careful when interacting with the hamster and avoid interacting with the hamster when it is hungry, excited, or fearful, so as to reduce the risk of being bitten.