Dogs might be able to detect coronavirus in humans, researchers say

Dogs might be able to detect coronavirus in humans, researchers say

As if dogs weren't good enough to humans already - some researchers think specially trained canines could help in the fight against the coronavirus pandemic. A team of researchers in the U.K. hopes to train dogs to literally sniff out the disease. Trained dogs are capable of detecting other medical conditions including diabetes, Parkinson's disease, malaria and even cancer.

Since there is a widespread need for more coronavirus testing, researchers from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, the nonprofit Medical Detection Dogs, and Durham University say they have "begun preparations to intensively train dogs so they could be ready in six weeks."

"Our previous work demonstrated that dogs can detect odors from humans with a malaria infection with extremely high accuracy - above the World Health Organization standards for a diagnostic," Professor James Logan said in a press release.  

Logan noted that using odor detection for COVID-19 is still in the early days and scientists do not know if the disease even has a specific odor yet, "but we know that other respiratory diseases change our body odor so there is a chance that it does."

If it works, the researchers believe dogs could be used to supplement ongoing testing efforts and could help "triage" up to 250 people per hour with non-invasive screening.

Medical Detection Dogs, a U.K.-based charity that works with dogs to help detect disease or assist with managing life-threatening medical conditions, says the canines will be trained the same way other detection dogs are taught. First, they sniff samples in a training room and indicate when they've found the scent they're looking for.

Then the dogs would be tasked with detecting the scent on people, working the way a Medical Alert Assistance Dog would, the charity explained on social media. Medical Detection Dogs also shared a link to the crowdfunding website the research team is using to help get this project off the ground. As of Thursday, their campaign had 102 backers and raised $5,260.

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