OHS Wildlife Handlers - Nuisance Wildlife Removal Inc.
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Transcript OHS Wildlife Handlers - Nuisance Wildlife Removal Inc.
Occupational Health for
Wildlife Handlers
M. A. Stevenson, DVM, PhD, DACVS
Director and Attending Veterinarian
The University of Montana-Missoula
Occupational Health
Why now?
– Mandatory for UM
to maintain animal
research program
accreditation
Why us?
– Everyone listed on
an AUP must and
any one else
interested may
participate
Staying Safe
Training
Knowledge
Awareness
Co-workers
Basic Safety Principles
Use appropriate PPE
– Gloves, coveralls, washable boots,
eye protection, mask or respirator
Good hygiene especially hands
Protect human food and water
Proper use of sharps containers
Communicate with your team
Please do not kiss the animals!
Early Reporting of Injury
Absolutely imperative to inform
– Direct Supervisor
– Principal Investigator
– Co-workers when in remote field areas
Any unusual symptoms seek
medical help immediately
Best defense is a good offense
Provide a complete history to assist
physicians
Rabies
Rhabdovirus
Fatal if no treatment
or vaccine protection
Infects all warmblooded mammals
Sylvatic rabies
wildlife in life cycle
Ole Yeller
Photo credits - CDC
“Mad” Rabies
Rabies
“Dumb” rabies
Wildlife
– Lose fear of humans
– Unusually “friendly”
– Uncharacteristic
places
– Uncharacteristic
times of day
– Neurological signs
– Photo credits - CDC
Rabid fox
Rabies
Wildlife
reservoirs in US
in 2001
–
–
–
–
Raccoons (38%)
Skunks (30%)
Bats (17%)
Foxes (6%)
– Photo credits - CDC
Silver-haired bat
Rabies Incidence in U.S.
Rabies Transmission
Animal bites (virus in saliva)
Contamination of broken skin
Aerosol in bat caves
Corneal, liver, kidney transplant
from infected donor
1-2 human cases/year in U.S.
most often bat-associated
Rabies
Clinical Signs
75% humans ill < 90 days
after bite wound
Nausea, vomiting,
headache
Tingling and pain on side of
body where bite located
Furious and paralytic forms
Cause of death usually
respiratory failure during
paralytic phase
CDC
Negri bodies – large pink
inclusions in cytoplasm of
brain cells – diagnose Rabies
Rabies Prevention
Avoid close contact with wild animals
exhibiting unusual behavior
Consider pre-exposure immunization if
work is high-risk
Report animal bites immediately: post-
exposure treatment should start
within 24 hours
Hantavirus
Hemorrhagic fever
with renal syndrome
(HFRS)
1993 - Hantavirus
pulmonary
syndrome (HPS)
Sin Nombre virus
Wildlife reservoir -
CDC
Peromyscus
maniculatus
CDC
Sin Nombre Incidence in U.S.
Sin Nombre Transmission
Aerosol of deer mouse urine or
feces
Contaminated hands mucous
membranes
Contaminated food
Bite transmission rare
30-35% fatality rate
Sin Nombre
Clinical Signs
Incubation 9 to 33
days
High fever, malaise,
muscle or joint
aches, nausea,
vomiting, diarrhea,
headaches,
respiratory distress,
cough
CDC
Early stage of disease
CDC
Middle stage of disease
Sin Nombre Prevention
Personal protective equipment
– Gloves, coveralls, boots
Work upwind of animals
Work in the sun, if possible
Wear a respirator
– Fit-test through Environmental
Health & Risk Management
Plague
Yersinia pestis
Nonmotile, Gram –
rod
“Black Death”
3 forms (mortality):
– Bubonic
– Septicemic (5-50%)
– Pneumonic (20%)
CDC
Gangrene of fingers – a
complication of plague
Prairie Dog
Plague
> 200 species rodent
reservoirs: prairie
dogs, rats, marmots,
hares, chipmunks,
ground squirrels
Xenopsylla cheopis
rat flea – regurgitates
up to 20,000 plague
bacteria from
“blocked” gut
CDC
CDC
Plague in Animals
Pin-point
hemorrhage
petechiae
Swollen lymph
nodes
Respiratory
disease
Photo credits - CDC
Plague Transmission
Bites of infected rodent fleas
Entry into breaks in skin when
handling infected rodents or
rabbits; wild carnivores that eat
infected prey
Domestic cats highly susceptible
– aerosol or handling
Dogs and cats can carry rat fleas
Plague
Clinical Signs
Illness 2-6 days
after infection
Swollen lymph
gland, fever, chills,
headache,
extreme
exhaustion
Photo credits - CDC
Plague Clinical Signs
Cough, bloody
sputum,
increased
heart rate,
shock, DIC
Gangrene of
fingers and
toes
CDC
1 month after finger amputation
for gangrene
Plague Prevention
Prevent flea infestation
Handle wild rodents with
appropriate PPE
Do not handle wild rodents with
petechial hemorrhages
Four Corners area of the US high
incidence
Tularemia
Francisella
tularensis
Aerobic, gram coccobacillus
> 10 organisms
1.4% fatality rate
Arthropods in life
cycle
CDC
Rhipicephalus sanguineus
“Brown dog tick”
Tularemia Transmission
Bites by infected arthropods
– Ticks
Handling infectious tissues
Contaminated food, water, soil
Inhalation of infective aerosols
No human to human transmission
Tularemia Clinical Signs
Fever, headache,
chills, body aches
(low back), nasal
discharge, sore
throat
Substernal pain,
cough, anorexia,
weight loss,
weakness
CDC
CDC
Tularemia Prevention
Personal
protective
equipment when
skinning hares or
rodents
Check for ticks
daily & remove
Use repellants if
possible
CDC
Wild hare – common culprit for
disease transmission to hunters
from bare-handed field skinning
West Nile Virus
Flavivirus
1999 - in US
Horses &
humans
encephalitis
Bird reservoirs:
corvids
Spread by
mosquitoes
CDC
CDC
Ochlerotatus japonicus
WNV Clinical Signs
Incubation 3-14 days
80% infected humans show no
symptoms
20% mild symptoms: fever,
headache, body aches, nausea,
rash
1 in 150 infected severe
disease (e.g., stupor, coma,
convulsions, paralysis)
West Nile Virus in the U.S.
West Nile Virus Prevention
Long-sleeved shirts and long pants,
when possible
Bug Tamer™ apparel (Shannon
Outdoors, Inc)
Mosquito repellant – DEET for skin
Avoid dusk to dawn hours outside
Avoid areas of standing water
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/westnile/re
cout.html
Q Fever
Coxiella burnetti
Sheep, goats,
cattle
1 organism can
cause disease
Placental tissues
Spread by
CDC
– Aerosol
– Hands
CDC
Q Fever Clinical Signs
50% infected get ill in 2-3 weeks
30-50% infected get pneumonia
Headache, malaise, muscle aches,
confusion, GI signs, weight loss,
hepatitis
1-2% fatality rate
Chronic infection endocarditis
65% chronic cases end in death
LCM
Lymphocytic
choriomeningitis virus
5% Mus musculus in
US; wild mice; pet
hamsters
Saliva, urine, feces of
infected rodents
Mucous membranes,
broken skin, bites
Hamster
Peromyscus sp.
LCM Clinical Signs
Humans showing illness signs 8-13
days post-infection
Early: biphasic fever, malaise, muscle
aches, headache, nausea, vomiting
Later: headache, stiff neck, confusion,
neurological signs
Early pregnancy: abortion or fetal birth
defects
Fatality rate < 1%
The University of Montana-Missoula
Occupational Health and Safety Program Participant Capture
Visitor
Annual Policy
Reminder to Dept.
Chairs & PIs
Employee/Animal User
IBC
“Right to Know”
Annual Training Sessions
RSC
IACUC reviews AUP
IACUC Coordinator
Risk Assessment by OH&S Physician (questionnaire review, facility
assessment, novel project assessment, feedback to IACUC)
IACUC
No medical surveillance warranted
Procedures/policies to minimize risk
Medical surveillance warranted
IACUC
OH&S Physician
Capture Mechanisms
Annual Medical Surveillance
Flow of participants
Administrative flow
Occupational Health and Safety Program Participant Medical Review
Individual risk assessment reviewed by OH&S Physician
Medical surveillance warranted
Medical surveillance
not warranted
(E-mail notification)
Cleared
without Restrictions
(E-mail notification)
Annual
Medical Surveillance
OH&S Physician
Further Evaluation
Serious health problem
or direct threat
(Letter notification)
Cleared
with Restrictions
(Letter notification)
IACUC Coordinator
Respirator necessary
IACUC
OH&S Physician
UM Administration
Flow of participants
Administrative flow
HR Director consultation if
employment impacted
Fit-test UM EH&RM Dept.