How Dogs can detect COVID-19 positive arrivals at airport?
Dogs can be trained to detect more than 90 percent of
Covid-19 infections even when patients are asymptomatic, according to research
published Monday, which authors hope could help replace the need to quarantine
new arrivals.
Using their remarkable sense of smell -- which can pick up the equivalent of half a teaspoon of sugar in an Olympic-sized swimming pool -- dogs have already shown that they can sniff out maladies such as cancer, malaria and epilepsy.
Several previous studies have shown proof-of-concept that dogs can detect SARS-CoV-2.Researchers from the London School of Tropical Medicine wanted to see if dogs could detect a distinctive odor given off from chemical compounds associated with someone who is Covid positive but doesn't show symptoms.
They gathered samples of clothing and face masks from people who had tested positive for mild or symptomatic SARS-CoV-2.Samples of the socks of 200 Covid-19 cases were collected and arranged in lab tests for six dogs that had been trained to indicate either a presence or absence of the chemical compound.
The dogs needed to be trained not to identify "false positives" in a bid to hack their reward system and obtain treats even if there were no Covid-19 samples in a given test.
Authors of the research, which has yet to be peer-reviewed,
said they hoped it could eventually replace the need for travelers to
quarantine -- which necessarily disrupts every arrival even though the vast majority are not Covid positive.
Of these, only around 3 would be expected to return a positive PCR test.
"This is a really important start and could lead to the useful, usable system," said Mick Bailey, professor of Comparative Immunology at the University of Bristol, who was not involved in the research.
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