“Ticks can transmit disease to people and their pets, particularly
in the warmer months when they are most active,” said lead study
author Erin Jones of the Maryland Department of Health and Mental
Hygiene in Baltimore.
Jones’ team analyzed data collected by a U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention initiative called TickNET, which aims to
prevent tick-borne diseases across the country. Lyme disease is the
most common such disease in the U.S.; the risk of exposure is
highest in northeastern states, the researchers write in Zoonoses
and Public Health.
“Preventing tick bites by avoiding wooded and brushy areas with high
grass and leaf litter, appropriately using repellents on skin and
clothing, and checking for ticks after going outside are effective
prevention methods,” Jones said in an email.
The researchers surveyed 2,727 households in three states where Lyme
disease is endemic: Connecticut, Maryland and New York. More than
half of the households, 1,526, had a dog, a cat or both. About 88
percent of these households reported using some form of tick control
on their pets.
Overall, about 31 percent of pet owners had found a tick crawling on
a human in the household and 19 percent of pet owners had found a
tick attached to a human household member. By comparison, about 20
percent of non-pet owning households found a tick crawling on a
human and 14 percent found a tick attached to a human.
About 20 percent of pet-owning households had found ticks on their
pets. Finding a tick on a pet doubled the likelihood of finding
ticks crawling on or attached to household members.
Owners still found ticks on their pets when they used tick control
medication, the study authors note.
But the researchers found no significant difference in tick-borne
diseases reported by pet owners and non-owners - in each group,
about 20 percent had had a verified tick-borne illness.
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Certain property characteristics, such as having a vegetable garden,
compost pile, log pile, bird feeder, stone walls and children’s play
equipment, were associated with higher odds of finding ticks
crawling on, or attached to, human household members.
“Lyme disease is getting more attention because the number of human
cases has increased, and tick habitats are changing as an indirect
consequence of climate change,” said Dr. Bruno Chomel, a veterinary
researcher at the University of California, Davis who wasn’t
involved in the study.
“It makes sense that people who have pets, especially dogs, are more
likely to be around fields or areas where ticks could be hanging
out,” he told Reuters Health by phone. “Pets can bring these
parasites into the human environment, especially if they sit on
couches or sleep in beds with owners.”
One limitation of the study is that tick control use was
self-reported, so the research team wasn’t sure whether the owners
applied the medication accurately and consistently or what brand was
used. In addition, the study group may have been too small to detect
an increased risk of tick-borne diseases when a household included
pets, the authors write.
“Pet owners are encouraged to check their pets for ticks daily,
especially after they spend time outdoors,” Jones told Reuters
Health. “Enjoy the outdoors, but prevent tick bites on yourselves
and your pets.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2tRlZQh Zoonoses and Public Health, online
June 19, 2017.
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