Human Health Concerns from Pet Ownership After a Tornado
Sebastian E. Heath, VetMB, MVetSci,1 Max Champion, BS2
1. Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, Purdue University, School of Veterinary Medicine, West Lafayette, Indiana
2. Tippecanoe County Humane Society, Lafayette, Indiana
Correspondence:
Sebastian E. Heath, BSc, VetMB, MVetSci
Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Purdue University School of Veterinary Medicine
1249 Lynn Hall
West Lafayette, IN 47907-1249 USA
Key Words: evacuation, human-animal bond, human health, pet ownership, tornado
Abbreviations:
ARC = American Red Cross
Received: 12 September 1994
Accepted: 24 January 1995
Abstract
Introduction: Although 50% to 60% of North American households own pets and many of these pets are considered family members, there is little information on the impact of pet ownership on pet-owning families affected by disasters.
Methods: This case report describes some of' the effects of a tornado on 17 families whose dwellings were destroyed. The setting was a typical urban trailer park.
Results: After a tornado at the Sagamore Village Trailer Park in north central Indian a, 104 families were evacuated. Seventeen (16.3%) of these families owned pets. For 14 families (13.5%), pet ownership had an important impact on the families' recovery from the tornado. Public- and mental-health concerns that arose from pet ownership included failure to evacuate a dangerous site, attempts to re-enter a dangerous site, separation anxiety leading to psychosomatic disturbances, and the need for additional animal care.
Conclusions: In urban disasters, the behaviors of families with a human-animal bond are likely to pose a significant risk to their own and others' health and safety in urban disasters. In this small study of families affected by a tornado, the most prominent public-health concerns were failure to evacuate because of a pet and attempts of re-entry to save a pet; the most common mental-health concerns resulted from separation anxiety from a pet and refusal to accept medical treatment until a pet's wellbeing can be assured. These are thought to be typical issues that will arise out of the human-animal bond in urban disaster situations and differ considerably from traditional public-health concerns over dog bites, spread of zoonotic diseases, and human food contamination. Medical disaster preparedness planning should consider the substantial effects that the human-animal bond is likely to have on human recovery from large-scale urban disasters.
Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 1996;1 1(1 ):67-70.