Hundreds of cats quarantined in New York
City bird flu outbreak
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[January 14, 2017]
By Gina Cherelus
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Hundreds of domestic
cats have been quarantined in New York City after contracting a strain
of highly contagious avian flu at shelters operated by a major animal
rescue organization, and the virus also infected at least one
veterinarian, officials said.
It is the first time the H7N2 strain of the virus, commonly found in
birds, has infected domestic cats, according to the New York City Health
Department.
Symptoms are generally mild, and include sneezing, coughing and runny
eyes and noses.
The virus was first detected last month in 45 cats housed at a Manhattan
shelter run by Animal Care Center of NYC, and later turned up in cats at
shelters in the boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn. It was not immediately
clear how the cats contracted the virus or how it spread so quickly, the
city's health department said in a statement on Thursday.
"We continue to urge New Yorkers who have adopted cats from ACC shelters
to be on alert for symptoms in their pets and take proper precautions,”
Health Commissioner Mary Bassett said in a statement.
She said the risk to human health from H7N2 is low.
H7N2 is a type of avian influenza virus, also known as the bird flu,
that can mutate and transfer onto mammals such as cats. It could infect
other mammals as well, including humans, according to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) website. The CDC provides
guidance on bird flu in cats on its website.
(https://www.cdc.gov/flu/spotlights/avian-influenza-cats.htm)
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More than 450 cats will remain at a temporary shelter for up to 90
days until a University of Wisconsin lab confirms they are no longer
contagious, the city's health department said. ACC, the New York
Health Department and the American Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Animals are monitoring the animals together.
In December, the city's health department and the CDC confirmed that
a veterinarian had been infected at the ACC's Manhattan shelter. It
was the first case of cat-to-human-transmission of the flu, the
city's health department said. The illness was mild and short-lived.
The health department screened more than 160 ACC employees for the
virus and contacted more than 80 percent of pet adopters from the
Manhattan shelter, but no other cases have been found.
Residents who adopted a cat from an ACC shelter between Nov. 12 and
Dec. 15 should monitor their pets for signs of sickness, officials
said.
(Editing by Frank McGurty and Matthew Lewis)
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