Coronavirus: Can your pet get or spread Covid-19 to humans?

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  • Animals can get Covid-19, but minks are the only ones so far known to have caught the coronavirus from people and spread it back
  • The best way to prevent Covid-19 from spreading among animals is to control it among people
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Can animals get or spread Covid-19? Photo: Shutterstock

Pets and other animals can get the coronavirus that causes Covid-19, but health officials say the risk of them spreading it to people is low.

Dogs, cats, ferrets, rabbits, otters, hyenas and white-tailed deer are among the animals that have tested positive, in most cases after contracting it from infected people.

While you do not have to worry much about getting Covid-19 from your pets, they should worry about getting it from you. People with confirmed or suspected Covid-19 should avoid contact with pets, farm animals and wildlife, as well as with other people, according to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.

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“If you wouldn’t go near another person because you’re sick or you might be exposed, do not go near another animal,” says Dr Scott Weese at Ontario Veterinary College.

This particular coronavirus most likely jumped from animals to humans in the first place, sparking a pandemic because the virus spreads so easily between people. But it does not easily spread from animals to people. Minks are the only known animals to have caught the virus from people and spread it back, according to Weese.

Three countries in northern Europe recorded cases of the virus spreading from people to mink on mink farms. The virus circulated among the animals before being passed back to farmworkers.

How easily animals can get and spread the virus might change with different variants, and the best way to prevent the virus from spreading among animals is to control it among people, Weese says.

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