This is absolutely correct. This is the WHO Guidelines and is used by most countries outside of the U.S. Do you practice medicine or just well-informed?Not to interfere with a fellow doc’s excellent and informative thread, but I can share with you the protocol we use.
Category 1 exposure is contact with an infected animal, saliva exposure to in tact skin. This carries minimum risk for transmission and is regarded by some as not an exposure.
Category 2 exposure is minor skin trauma from bites or scratches, involving saliva from the animal, but with no visible bleeding. This exposure carries a risk for transmission, although still low. Obviously these things are impossible to quantify in terms of percentage or absolute values.
Category 3 exposure is when skin is breached, with associated bleeding and subsequent saliva contact or contact of saliva on mucosal surfaces. This is regarded as a high risk exposure and will receive immunoglobulin in the wound sites as well as the four vaccines.
Contact with all other bodily fluids, except saliva and cerebrospinal fluid, from an infected animal is believed to not carry any exposure risk and seen as a Category 1 exposure.
My recommendations are an amalgamation from CDC, US Military, and UpToDate.
The only difference I see with the WHO guidelines is that it assumes that you know the animal is infected with rabies or suspected to have rabies. The US Military unofficial recommendations, when I was practicing overseas in rabies endemic areas, was more cautious and assumed any wild animal exposure was from a suspected animal (because what wild animal, in their right mind, would approach a human?).
Hunting, or other activity where humans initiate the contact, puts all of this in the gray zone. If you have the ability to really observe an animal, you may be able to tell if it is acting normally or not. If you don't have the ability to observe the animal, or you are doing cull hunts for sickly animals, you don't know for sure. But the chances are still low that you will happen to shoot a rabies-infected animal AND have exposure.
Again, you need to weigh your own risk vs benefit.