Rabies vaccine can be given after the New Crown vaccine. In the “Technical Guidelines for Vaccination against New Coronavirus (First Edition)” issued by the Health Care Commission, it is clearly stated that the interval between vaccination with the New Coronavirus vaccine may be disregarded when rabies vaccination is required for reasons such as injury caused by animals. Rabies vaccine is mainly used for post-exposure immunization, that is, immunization after being bitten by an animal, and the timeliness of vaccine-induced immunity is particularly important. Therefore, people who have been injured by animals should receive rabies vaccination as early as possible, even if they have received the New Crown vaccine, to avoid rabies virus infection and life-threatening injuries due to unregulated prophylactic treatment after exposure. However, there may be cases where a second dose of New Crown vaccine is required after rabies vaccination, in which case patients are advised to receive New Crown vaccine 2 weeks after rabies vaccination. Although the two components do not create a conflict, simultaneous vaccination is generally not recommended in order to facilitate identification or differentiation of suspected adverse vaccine reactions that may occur with the New Crown vaccine. If you have questions about vaccination, it is recommended that you consult with your local medical department or vaccination unit to determine if you can be vaccinated, and then just proceed with rabies vaccination. For patients with common adverse reactions, such as redness, swelling, pain, itchiness, mild fever, weakness, headache, dizziness, arthralgia, muscle pain, vomiting, abdominal pain, etc., they can generally subside on their own without treatment; for those with serious adverse reactions, such as fever that does not subside or allergic rash that appears within 72 hours of vaccination, contact the vaccination site for further treatment. The vaccination site should be contacted for further treatment.