Prairie dog sales banned as investigation
expands to 15 states
Thursday, June 12, 2003 Posted: 11:47 AM EDT (1547 GMT)
The government banned the sale of prairie dogs after some of the animals were
linked to the monkeypox outbreak.
ATLANTA, Georgia (AP) -- The U.S. government moved aggressively to contain
the first outbreak of monkeypox in the Western Hemisphere, prohibiting imports
of African rodents, banning the sale of prairie dogs, and recommending smallpox
shots for people exposed to monkeypox.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced the measures
Wednesday, the same day federal investigators searched for infected prairie dogs
in eight more states, bringing the total to 15.
The smallpox vaccine can prevent monkeypox -- an exotic African disease that
has spread from prairie dogs to humans -- up to two weeks after exposure to the
virus, but is most effective in the first four days.
"We're optimistic we can deliver the vaccine to these people in time to do
good," said Dr. David Fleming, the CDC's deputy director for Public Health and
Science.
As of Wednesday, health officials had confirmed a total of nine human cases
of the disease -- four in Wisconsin, four in Indiana and one in Illinois.
Fifty-four possible cases had been reported -- 25 in Indiana, 17 in Wisconsin,
11 in Illinois and one in New Jersey, CDC spokesman Tom Skinner said. No one has
died of the disease.
Fleming said he is confident the outbreak will be controlled.
"Monkeypox is a disease that is potentially transmissible from person to
person but at a fairly low level," he said. "I don't anticipate the same kind of
problem that we anticipate from SARS."
The Department of Agriculture will be in charge of enforcing the prairie dog
ban, which also prohibits transporting the animals. Gambian rats and five other
types of large African rodents were banned because a Gambian rat is believed to
have spread the virus to prairie dogs, rodents native to the American Plains.
Fleming said the smallpox vaccine is 85 percent effective against monkeypox.
The smallpox vaccine is widely available because states stocked up on it out of
fear of bioterrorism. More than 37,000 health workers in the United States have
been vaccinated.
"State health departments have been actively involved in planning and
preparing for the possibility of a bioterrorist event," Health and Human
Services Secretary Tommy Thompson said. "We are now seeing that this level of
preparation can also assist in unexpected, natural outbreaks."
The CDC said health care workers, veterinarians and family members who have
cared for or had close contact with infected people or animals should get
vaccinations. The agency also warned veterinarians and doctors to be on the
lookout for the symptoms, especially in owners of prairie dogs or exotic rodents
from Africa.
An aggressive approach
CDC officials didn't know how many people would have to be vaccinated, but
Fleming said he expected the number to be modest.
About 40 out of every million people given the smallpox vaccine for the first
time will face a life-threatening injury, and one or two will die.
Still, the CDC is recommending vaccinations even for pregnant women, children
and people with eczema -- for whom the vaccine is usually discouraged -- who
have been exposed to infected prairie dogs.
MONKEYPOX
The disease is usually found in remote villages in Central and West Africa.
Monkeypox is related to the virus that causes smallpox. There is no vaccine,
but smallpox vaccinations might protect against monkeypox.
Symptoms include a fever, headache, chills and a rash.
The death rate among those with monkeypox ranges from 1 percent to 10
percent, with the highest rates among young children.
The disease is usually transmitted to people from other primates or squirrels
through a bite or contact with the animal's blood.
Sources: The Associated Press/World Health Organization
"Because of the real risk here ... we're recommending a somewhat aggressive
approach of who should get the vaccine," Fleming said.
Monkeypox-infected prairie dogs distributed from Phil's Pocket Pets of Villa
Park, Illinois, may have been sold to numerous buyers in 15 states since April
15, according to a Department of Agriculture emergency warning issued Wednesday.
The states where possibly infected prairie dogs were being sought were
Kentucky, Florida, Tennessee, Mississippi, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey,
New York, Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Texas, Ohio and South
Carolina.
Health officials from Kentucky and New York said Wednesday they have found no
infected prairie dogs.
Later Wednesday, health officials in Mississippi said they had ruled out a
possible threat, saying two animals shipped to the state from the Illinois pet
shop turned out to be a pair of healthy flying squirrels.
Monkeypox, which produces pus-filled blisters, fever, rash, chills and aches,
is a milder relative of smallpox. It has a mortality rate of 1 percent to 10
percent in Africa, but U.S. officials believe better nutrition and medical
treatment here probably will prevent deaths.
Investigators are seeking people who have bought or swapped exotic pets
distributed since April by Pocket Pets, where a shipment of prairie dogs is
believed to have been infected by a Gambian giant rat imported from Africa.
Peter Jahrling, scientific adviser at the Army Medical Research Institute for
Infectious Diseases, said exotic animals may in the future have to be put in
quarantine and examined thoroughly for diseases. That has worked for imports of
primates, which imported yellow fever in the 1930s and suffered from Ebola in
1989.
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