Group that brought dogs with influenza to Canada says it had 'no way of knowing' animals were sick - Action News
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Windsor

Group that brought dogs with influenza to Canada says it had 'no way of knowing' animals were sick

Staff at MotorCity Greyhound Rescue in Detroit, Mich. say they took all necessary precautions before importing greyhounds with a highly infectious canine flu from South Korea.

Greyhounds were vaccinated and quarantined for 3 months before flying to the U.S.

Members of MotorCity Greyhound Rescue posted this photo on Facebook after helping bring greyhound dogs from South Korea to Michigan in December 2017. (Facebook/MCGRGroup)

Staff atMotorCity Greyhound Rescue in Detroit, Mich., say they took all necessary precautionsbefore importing greyhoundsfrom South Korea and had "no way of knowing" the animals were carrying a highly infectious canine flu.

Two dogs with H3N2canine influenza were eventually imported to Essex County, marking the first time the respiratory disease, which hasrapidly spread across Asia and parts of the U.S., made its way into Canada.

"We're not puppy mills. We're not bringing in unhealthy dogs into the country to try and sell them," said greyhound rescue vice-president Jennifer Valdez. "We're truly a rescue. We wanted to save these dogs."

The animal welfare group hashelped more than 400 dogs since opening 2011, but this was the first time itrescued greyhounds from South Korea, she explained. An agency there said thedogs were destined for the meat trade.

Valdez said greyhound rescue has foster homes on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border and regularly uses an importer's license to adopt dogs in Ontario.

'No way of knowing'

Before the dogs even got off the ground in South Korea, Valdez said they were quarantined for three months

"They were fully vaccinated," she said. "We had no way of knowing that they would have a different strain of flu."

Jennifer Valdez, vice president of the rescue organization, said the dogs were vaccinated and quarantined for three months before flying to the U.S. (Facebook/MCGRGroup)

There is no known human risk to the canine flu, according to the Windsor-Essex County Health Unit, but officials are concerned a dog infected with H3N2could also contract a human flu, and those strains could combine to create a new virus.

It can be difficult to determine if a dog actually has the canine flu, according toScottWeese, a professor and infectious disease specialist at the Ontario Veterinary College, but the illness can cause complications for older dogs, or canines with existing health problems.

Dogs are feeling better

Valdez said the two dogs carrying the flu in Canada are feeling better. She saidthat after her organizationfound out the two animals were sick, the dogswere taken to the vet the next day.

"We followed the recommended protocols."

Valdez said staff are taking every step to ensure the disease, which has rapidly spread across Asia and the U.S. does not spread in Canada. (Facebook/MCGRGroup)

Valdezplans on doing everything she can to make sure the flu doesn't spread further.

The dogs and puppiesin the foster home have not come into contact with any of the other dogs,she said. "We've taken the precautions that it would not spread beyond those homes and those dogs will be healthy before they're out in the general public."

Rabies the only reportable disease

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency, which regulates the import of dogs, saidthe following requirements must be met before a dog can be brought into Canada:

  • Rabies vaccination for dogs three months or older.
  • The dog must be healthy and fit to travel with no visible signs of illness.
  • The dog must be accompanied by export documents.

"The World Trade Organization sets out rules for international trade," the agency said in an email to CBC News. "One of the established import guidelines states that a country cannot impose import restrictions for diseases for which no official programs are in place to control or eliminate the disease."

Currently"rabies is the only federally reportable disease in domestic dogs that is regulated in Canada," the agency said.