| Fate of Animals in Disasters Has Human Health
Consequences | |
![]() "On average every year in the U.S. probably about 300,000 people do not evacuate because of their pets." Sebastian Heath, veterinarian and internationally-known animal health consultant | By Haven Miller
LEXINGTON,
Ky. (Oct. 29, 2003) – Whether it’s family pets left behind in a flood
or livestock hit with a disease, adverse impacts on animals during
disasters affects the quality of life for humans. That’s
the message articulated by veterinarian and internationally-known animal
health consultant Sebastian Heath during a recent presentation at the
University of Kentucky College of Agriculture on the consequences of
disasters on animal and human health.
Over
the past several years, Heath has studied what happens to people and
animals when communities must evacuate because of fires, chemical spills
or floods.
After one such disaster, the Yuba County, California flood of 1997,
Heath asked residents if they evacuated and if they took their cats or
dogs with them. He
found the decision of whether or not to evacuate is strongly linked to
presence or absence of children, and the number of pets a family owns. “We
found that the failure of people to evacuate is a feature of households
without children, and it’s so common in those households that for every
additional pet they own the chance the owners will not evacuate
doubles,” he said.
“So somebody with more than three animals, for example, has an
eight times greater chance of not evacuating than somebody with a single
animal.” For
people with children the results were different because often parents
would first leave without the pets, but soon return for the pets to meet
the needs of the children.
Heath
said for people with multiple animals it’s difficult for them to
transport their cats and dogs to safety, and the consequences can pose a
serious threat to public safety. “On
average every year in the U.S. probably about 300,000 people do not
evacuate because of their pets,” he said. The
challenge to communities, he said, is to survey neighborhoods and
determine who the people are with multiple pets and most likely to need
help in time of disaster, then set up networks and implement programs to
do that. “Several
cities are going door to door when an evacuation is ordered and offering
people cardboard boxes, leashes, collars and carriers for cats and
dogs,” Heath said. “We need to think about how we can turn disasters
into opportunities rather than just going along and saying we need to do
more pet rescues.” According
to Heath, who authored the book “Animal Management in Disasters,” the
fate of livestock during disasters or infectious disease outbreaks also
has implications for human health and welfare.
An example is foot and mouth disease. “It
really wasn’t until the (2001) outbreak of foot and mouth disease in the
United Kingdom that the federal government really started paying attention
to animals and disasters, and really started thinking about the tremendous
consequences that livestock could have on communities in general,” Heath
said. He
said impacts of an animal infectious disease such as foot and mouth are
not just on animal health, but on social and financial systems as well.
An example is the strong connection between livestock and feed
grains. “For
every 100,000 cattle we would kill or would go off feed because of foot
and mouth disease, the global corn supply would increase by 8 percent, and
that means that for every 100,000 animals that would go off feed here in
the U.S. the global corn price would come down, and that could have
serious implications for developing countries and other corn and soybean
producing countries,” Heath said. Heath
said we should develop serious and meaningful farm-based security programs
to prevent the spread of animal infectious diseases.
He
also said we, as a society, need to start looking at animal disease
control within the broader context of hazard preparedness generally, and
establish a continuum of preparedness for all kinds of disasters. Heath’s presentation was sponsored by UK’s Barnhart Fund for Excellence and the Department of Veterinary Science. Writer: Haven Miller, 859-257-4736, ext. 272 Return to Main News page. |