If you are scratched by your own cat, it depends on whether the cat has been vaccinated against rabies. If the cat has been vaccinated against rabies, it usually does not matter and does not need to go to the vaccination station for rabies vaccination. However, if the cat has not been vaccinated against rabies and the skin is broken after being scratched, the rabies virus may invade the subcutaneous nerve tissue through the broken skin and then enter the central nervous system and develop. Since rabies is a malignant and infectious disease, once it develops there is no cure and its mortality rate can reach 100%, so if your own cat has not been vaccinated, do not take a chance and go to the nearest vaccination station for rabies vaccination.