Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8504861 | The Veterinary Journal | 2018 | 28 Pages |
Abstract
These results suggest that management practices for unowned cats are inadequate for control of enteropathogens and that the presence of diarrhea is a poor indicator of enteropathogen carriage. Risk-management strategies to reduce transmission to people and other animals should focus on sanitation, housing, compliance with preventive care guidelines, periodic surveillance, response to specific enteropathogens, humane population management of free-roaming community cats, public health education, and minimizing the duration and number of cats in mass confinement.
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Authors
L.A. Andersen, J.K. Levy, C.M. McManus, S.P. McGorray, C.M. Leutenegger, J. Piccione, L.K. Blackwelder, S.J. Tucker,