- MONDAY, Oct. 6 (HealthDay News) — Exposing your children to the
joys of pet ownership may, in some cases, also mean exposing them to
infections and injuries.
Parents need to be aware of the dangers — including salmonella
infection and even monkey pox — of owning such nontraditional pets as
rodents, reptiles, monkeys and more, says a report from the American
Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) published in the October issue of
Pediatrics.
The report is the first comprehensive statement on the topic, said
study co-author Dr. Robert Frenck, a pediatrics professor at Cincinnati
Children's Hospital and a member of the AAP committee on infectious
diseases.
“Nontraditional pets are becoming more traditional, and nontraditional
pets can expose kids to disease they otherwise might not be exposed to,”
Frenck said. “If parents are thinking about having these nontraditional
pets, they may want to talk to a veterinarian and/or pediatrician first to
see if there is any real concern.”
Dr. Charles Miller, a professor of pediatric infectious diseases at the
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, added, “From the standpoint
of public education and from the standpoint of not only pediatricians but
also family practitioners, this is important.”
The number of exotic animals in the United States has almost doubled
since 2002. For instance, 40,000 households now harbor hedgehogs, while
4.4 million homes are home to reptiles, according to the report.
The risks are real. In 2003, a human monkey pox outbreak was traced
back to imported African Gambian rats that had infected prairie dogs sold
as pets. Small pet turtles were responsible for 103 cases of salmonella
infection in the second half of last year, mostly in young children, the
report found.
And just last week, an Iraqi dog recently shipped to the United States
as part of an international animal rescue effort was found to have rabies.
Twenty-four other animals in the shipment, already distributed to 16
states, were potentially exposed, according to the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention's Oct. 3 issue of Morbidity and
Mortality Weekly Report.
The new AAP review details a number of diseases potentially transmitted
by these more unusual pets: Reptiles have a high rate of carrying
different strains of salmonella, as do turtles, baby poultry — including
chicks — and hamsters.
Plague is carried by wild rodents and transmitted to humans handling
infected animals — including domestic cats — that have been bitten by
fleas. And macaque monkeys carry the herpes B virus.
And animals don't have to be in the home to pose a risk. More than 55
outbreaks of disease in humans, including infection with E. coli
bacteria, involved animals in public settings from 1991 to 2005.
The report recommends frequent hand washing to help minimize these
risks.
Children under 5 years old are at particular risk, partly because their
immune systems are still developing. Adults with weakened immune systems,
the elderly and pregnant women are also at greater risk.
Typically, allergies are associated more with cats and dogs than with
nontraditional pets, said Dr. Jonathan Field, emeritus director of the
pediatric allergy and asthma clinic at New York University/Bellevue
Medical Center in New York City. The real problem comes with people who
have weakened immune systems and are exposed to a bacteria or virus from
one of these pets.
More information
To learn more, visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention's Healthy Pets Healthy People.
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