Scientists suggest keeping cats indoors if
bird flu found in birds
By Malcolm Ritter
Associated Press
NEW YORK —
People living in areas where bird flu has been found in poultry or wild birds
should keep their cats indoors, say scientists who believe the potential role
of felines in spreading the virus is being overlooked.
Cats have been known to become infected with the H5N1 virus and lab
experiments show they can give it to other cats, although nobody knows whether
they can transmit it to people or poultry, the researchers say in Thursday's
issue of the journal Nature.
Scientists know so little about H5N1 in cats that it's difficult to assess
the risk they pose when infected, wrote virologist Albert Osterhaus
and colleagues at the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, The Netherlands,
along with Peter Roeder of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations.
Still, "we believe that the potential role of cats should be considered
in official guidelines for controlling the spread of H5N1 virus
infection," they wrote.
In areas where H5N1 has been found in poultry or wild birds, cats should be
kept away from infected birds or their droppings, and cats suspected of such
contacts or showing symptoms of infection should be quarantined and tested, they
wrote. Where possible, cats could be kept indoors to prevent contact, they
wrote.
The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, an agency of the
European Union, has also recommended keeping cats indoors if they live within
about six miles of a verified H5N1 infection in birds.
Some bird flu experts said they found it premature to suggest keeping cats
indoors. Scientists need to learn more about what role, if any, cats have in
spreading H5N1 before making such blanket recommendations, said Dr. Arnold S. Monto of the University of Michigan School of Public
Health.
Osterhaus, discussing his recommendations in a
telephone interview, said that "people in the United
States should realize the disease is not
there, so there is no reason at this moment to be concerned at all."