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Reuters
Reuters
Health

Sit, stay, detect COVID! Chile dogs report for duty at Santiago airport

FILE PHOTO: A sniffer dog trained to detect the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in highly frequented places works, at the International Airport of Santiago, Chile, December 21, 2020. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado

The task of sniffing out passengers infected with COVID-19 at Chile's Santiago international airport is going to the dogs.

A team of Golden Retrievers and Labradors sit when they smell the virus and get a treat. The canines sport green "biodetector" jackets with a red cross.

Passengers at an airport health checkpoint wipe their necks and wrists with gauze pads that are then put in glass containers and sent to the dogs to see if they detect COVID-19.

FILE PHOTO: A policeman pets a sniffer dog trained to detect the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in highly frequented places, at the International Airport of Santiago, Chile, December 21, 2020. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado

Sniffer dogs are best-known for finding drugs and explosives but have also previously been trained to detect malaria, cancer and Parkinson's disease.

Dogs trained to detect the novel coronavirus have already begun sniffing passenger samples at airports in the United Arab Emirates and Finland.

A study recently found dogs can identify infected individuals with 85% to 100% accuracy and rule out infection with 92% to 99% accuracy.

FILE PHOTO: Labrador sniffing dog 'Elek' searches for a sample at the training site for sniffing dogs of the Chilean police which is developing a training program to detect the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in highly frequented places in Santiago, Chile July 28, 2020. Picture taken July 28, 2020. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado

Chile's Carabinero police trained the dogs and Inspector General Esteban Diaz said dogs have more than 3 million olfactory receptors, more than 50 times those of humans, so were uniquely placed to help fight the coronavirus.

Infections in Chile are far down from a peak in June but have begun rising again with about 2,000 new cases on average reported each day, according to a Reuters tally. Chile has a total of 589,189 confirmed cases and 16,217 deaths from the disease. (Graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/34pvUyi)

FILE PHOTO: A sniffer dog trained to detect the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in highly frequented places works, at the International Airport of Santiago, Chile, December 21, 2020. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado

(Reporting by Jorge Vega and Patrick Alwine; Writing by Lisa Shumaker; Editing by Richard Pullin)

FILE PHOTO: Labrador sniffing dog 'Cailin' wears a distinctive jacket at the training site for sniffing dogs of the Chilean police which is developing a training program to detect the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in highly frequented places in Santiago, Chile July 28, 2020. Picture taken July 28, 2020. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado
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