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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Neil Shaw

Monkeypox patients advised to stay away from pets under latest guidance

Monkeypox patients should give their pets a wide berth, according to the latest guidance released by European health authorities. They have even gone so far as to recommending that household rodents – as these are the most susceptible to the disease – such as mice, guinea pigs, hamsters and gerbils should be isolated in government laboratories or even culled.

A report from the European Centre for Disease Control says pets of people with monkeypox should be isolated, adding: “Rodent pets should ideally be isolated in monitored facilities, complying with respiratory isolation (eg. a laboratory) and animal welfare conditions (e.g. government facilities, kennels or animal welfare organisations), and tested (by PCR) for exposure before quarantine ends.

Culling has been deemed a last-resort measure, where monitored isolation and regular testing is impractical, although it has been mooted as a way of halting the disease’s progress in regions affected.

“Euthanasia should only be a last resort reserved to situations where testing and/or isolation are not feasible.”

Dr Christine Middlemiss, the UK's Chief Veterinary Officer, told the Telegraph: “No cases of monkeypox have ever been suspected or reported in pets in the UK and the risk remains low. We will continue to monitor the situation closely and work with veterinary and public health colleagues, both in the UK and across the world, to manage the animal health associated risks with monkeypox.”

Professor David Robertson, of the Glasgow Centre for Virus Research, revealed in the Telegraph that although the threat of monkeypox jumping from humans to pets to wildlife is low, it is a “valid concern”.

“Rabbits and mice would be ones to watch, as they’re likely to be kept as pets,” he said. “This virus does have quite a wide host range which is always worrying in terms of potential to establish in a new host species… it would seem sensible to monitor any animals/pets that infected people are in contact with.”

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