London:A UK charity said it is working in partnership with scientists to explore how dogs can be trained to sniff out Covid-19 and join the fight against the coronavirus pandemic.
Medical Detection Dogs said it is bringing together a team involving the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) and Durham University which recently collaborated to successfully prove that dogs can be trained to detect malaria.
"In principle, we're sure that dogs could detect COVID-19. We are now looking into how we can safely catch the odour of the virus from patients and present it to the dogs," said Dr Claire Guest, CEO and Co-Founder of Medical Detection Dogs (MDD).
"The aim is that dogs will be able to screen anyone including those who are asymptomatic and tell us whether they need to be tested. This would be fast, effective and non-invasive and make sure the limited National Health Service testing resources are only used where they are needed," she said.
The team has started preparations to intensively train dogs so they could be ready in six weeks to help provide a rapid, non-invasive diagnosis, hopefully at a time when the pandemic would be at its tail end in the UK.
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Dogs searching for COVID-19 would be trained in the same way as those dogs the charity has already trained to detect diseases like cancer, Parkinson's and bacterial infections -- by sniffing samples in the charity's training room and indicating when they have found it.