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    Friday, May 10, 2024

    State won't pay for rabies test of wild animals in pet-only cases

    The state Department of Public Health’s State Laboratory in Rocky Hill is no longer providing state-funded testing of rabid wild animals suspected of infecting domestic pets but where there was no human exposure, the department announced Monday.

    The change took effect July 1.

    The health department’s lab will continue to provide and pay for rabies testing of any wild or domestic animal suspected of carrying rabies if humans have been exposed, the department said in a news release.

    The new policy will require pet owners to pay for the costs of testing potentially rabid animals who may have infected their pet, the department said.

    This primarily affects owners whose pets have not been properly vaccinated, since these pets are placed in quarantine for up to six months, while vaccinated pets can be observed at home for 45 days.

    The health department stressed that the change in testing was not a result of state budget cuts.

    “The mission of the department is to protect human health, and this change was made to keep us aligned with that mission,” said Jafar Razeq, state lab director.

    “Any potentially rabid animal that comes in contact with a human resulting in an exposure according to national guidelines will continue to be tested in our lab," he said. "Pet owners who keep their pets’ rabies vaccinations up to date as required by state law will not be impacted by this change.”

    Maura Downes, spokeswoman for the health department, said the decision was made to reallocate staff resources toward human diseases and "new and emerging threats" in public health, including the Zika virus.

    As was the practice before July 1, pet owners can opt to pay to have their unvaccinated pet quarantined for six months to watch for infection or euthanize their pet.

    Owners who wish to have the wild animal tested for rabies can take the animal to the University of Connecticut’s Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory, which will test the wild animal for a modest fee.

    If the wild animal tests negative, the pet can be vaccinated and avoid quarantine.

    The UConn lab can be reached at: (860) 486-3738 or http://cvmdl.uconn.edu/.

    During 2014-15, 957 raccoons, skunks, groundhogs and opossums were tested for rabies and represent the majority of wild animals tested.

    Of those animals tested, 69 percent involved only domestic pet exposure, not human exposure, the department said.

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