Baby Chicks Linked to Salmonella
2007-Mar-29
THURSDAY, March 29 (HealthDay News) -- With Easter just 10 days
away, many parents are probably thinking about giving baby chicks
to their children as pets. But doing so can put kids in harm's way,
because the animals may carry a serious -- and potentially fatal --
germ called salmonella, U.S. health officials warn.
Federal researchers have traced 81 infections and three
outbreaks of salmonella in 2006 to the handling of baby chicks.
"This is a long-standing issue," said Dr. Pascal James Imperato,
chairman of the department of preventive medicine and community
health at the State University of New York Downstate Medical
Center, in New York City. "We know that chicks and ducklings are
often carriers of salmonella."
When these animals are touched by young children, the risk of
fecal oral contamination is very high, Imperato said. "For most
people in the United States, it is inappropriate for parents to
give children baby chicks," he said.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates
that there are 1.5 million cases of salmonella poisoning each year
in the United States from a variety of causes.
"In recent years, there have been more outbreaks associated with
exposure to chicks," said Dr. Nicholas Gaffga, a CDC medical
epidemiologist, adding this could be due to better reporting of
cases.
Reporting in the March 30 issue of the
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, CDC researchers cited
three outbreaks last year, including one in Kansas where 10
children who handled baby chicks at a day-care center were infected
with salmonella.
A couple of months later, 46 people in Kansas came down with the
same strain of the disease after buying chicks. Eight of these
people were hospitalized. Many of the people who bought the chicks
wanted them as pets for their children, according to the CDC
report.
The other outbreaks occurred in Michigan and in Washington
state.
"The CDC recommends that children under 5 years of age do not
have contact with baby birds," Gaffga said. "If older children
touch baby birds, they should wash their hands with soap and warm
water for at least 20 seconds."
In addition, clothes, tables, bathtubs, floors -- anything the
bird touches -- should be considered contaminated until they are
properly cleaned, Gaffga said.
Gaffga also noted that chicks that are dyed Easter colors are
even less safe than un-dyed chicks. "Chicks are dyed to make them
more attractive to children," he said. "Many states prohibit the
sale of dyed chicks. This is to prevent them from being sold to
children as pets."
Imperato said that while hand-washing can prevent the
transmission of salmonella, it's not something easily monitored,
especially among small children. "Parents should really avoid
giving children baby chicks as pets," he said.
According to the CDC, salmonella is a bacteria that produces an
infection called salmonellosis. Most persons infected with
salmonella develop diarrhea, fever, and abdominal cramps 12 to 72
hours after infection. The illness typically lasts four to seven
days, and most persons recover without treatment.
But for some, the diarrhea may be so severe that the patient
needs to be hospitalized. In these patients, the infection may
spread from the intestines to the blood stream, and then to other
body sites, and can cause death unless the person is treated
promptly with antibiotics. The elderly, infants, and those with
impaired immune systems are more likely to have a severe illness,
the CDC said.
More information
For more on the health risks posed by baby chicks, visit the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
HealthDay News
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