If the hamster that bites has bubonic plague, then it is likely that the hamster will infect people with bubonic plague through some other means besides the bite. If you have lived with the hamster for a long time, and the hamster has not been in contact with other animals in the wild, you do not need to worry about being infected with the plague. After being bitten by a hamster, it is indeed possible to cause infection of the wound, but generally speaking, hamsters are pets raised by people, the possibility of contact with the outside environment is not very high, and biting a person under this circumstance will not generally transmit any disease, the plague is a potent infectious disease, and if it is a consideration of the transmission of the plague, it is very likely that some of these living environments around the hamster, or some of the hamsters around it, will die of the plague as well. get bubonic plague and die. So if the hamster has been healthy recently and has been in contact with the hamster for a long time, you don’t have to worry about biting yourself to get the plague.