Page 11 - Pandemic: How Climate, the Environment, and Superbugs Increase the Risk
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of thousands of other animals, including tigers, monkeys, and exotic
               food animals, were illegally smuggled into the United States in private
               planes and boats during that time.
                   Whether legal or illegal, any of those animals may carry a new
               disease or a disease never before seen in the United States. That
               happened when a shipment of African rodents, including large rodents
               known as Gambian rats, brought monkeypox to the United States in
               2003. On Mother’s Day of that year, Tammy Kautzer took her three-
               year-old daughter Schyan to a swap meet in Wausau, Wisconsin. A pet
               dealer there sold two young prairie dogs to Kautzer.
                   Two days later, Kautzer thought one of the prairie dogs seemed like
               it had a cold. Kautzer took the prairie dog to the vet. The vet diagnosed
               a swollen lymph node and prescribed antibiotics. The animal’s viruses
               infected several people at the vet’s office that day.






























                  Left to right: Schyan, Steve, and Tammy Kautzer were quarantined at their home
                  after contracting monkeypox. Tammy holds Chuckles, the prairie dog that survived
                  the infection. The family decided to keep Chuckles as they believed they were
                  immune from contracting monkeypox again.



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