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Doctors: No hamsters or exotic pets for young kids
Posted: 06 October 2008 05:19 AM   [ Ignore ]
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What the article does not point out and should be is that these little animals are often in even more danger from young children than the children are from them.  Very young children have a tendency to not know their own strength or understand that an animal is a living being and not a toy to be banged around or harmed.  These are things children learn as they grow and no small animal should be made to be a demonstrator of torment and annihilation at the hands of a very young human being. 

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081006/ap_on_he_me/med_exotic_pets

Doctors: No hamsters or exotic pets for young kids

By LINDSEY TANNER, AP Medical Writer 1 hour, 29 minutes ago

CHICAGO - Warning: young children should not keep hedgehogs as pets — or hamsters, baby chicks, lizards and turtles, for that matter — because of risks for disease.

That’s according to the nation’s leading pediatricians’ group in a new report about dangers from exotic animals.

Besides evidence that they can carry dangerous and sometimes potentially deadly germs, exotic pets may be more prone than cats and dogs to bite, scratch or claw — putting children younger than 5 particularly at risk, the report says.

Young children are vulnerable because of developing immune systems plus they often put their hands in their mouths.

That means families with children younger than 5 should avoid owning “nontraditional” pets. Also, kids that young should avoid contact with these animals in petting zoos or other public places, according to the report from the American Academy of Pediatrics. The report appears in the October edition of the group’s medical journal, Pediatrics.

“Many parents clearly don’t understand the risks from various infections” these animals often carry, said Dr. Larry Pickering, the report’s lead author and an infectious disease specialist at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For example, about 11 percent of salmonella illnesses in children are thought to stem from contact with lizards, turtles and other reptiles, Pickering said. Hamsters also can carry this germ, which can cause severe diarrhea, fever and stomach cramps.

Salmonella also has been found in baby chicks, and young children can get it by kissing or touching the animals and then putting their hands in their mouths, he said.

Study co-author Dr. Joseph Bocchini said he recently treated an infant who got salmonella from the family’s pet iguana, which was allowed to roam freely in the home. The child was hospitalized for four weeks but has recovered, said Bocchini, head of the academy’s infectious diseases committee and pediatrics chairman at Louisiana State University in Shreveport.

Hedgehogs can be dangerous because their quills can penetrate skin and have been known to spread a bacteria germ that can cause fever, stomach pain and a rash, the report said.

With supervision and precautions like hand-washing, contact between children and animals “is a good thing,“ Bocchini said. But families should wait until children are older before bringing home an exotic pet, he said.

Those who already have these pets should contact their veterinarians about specific risks and possible new homes for the animals, he said.

Data cited in the study indicate that about 4 million U.S. households have pet reptiles. According to the American Veterinary Medical Association, all kinds of exotic pets are on the rise, although generally fewer than 2 percent of households own them.

The veterinarian group’s Mike Dutton, a Weare, N.H., exotic animal specialist, said the recommendations send an important message to parents who sometimes buy exotic pets on an impulse, “then they ask questions, sometimes many months later.“

But a spokesman for the International Hedgehog Association said there’s no reason to single out hedgehogs or other exotic pets.

“Our recommendation is that no animal should be a pet for kids 5 and under,“ said Z.G. Standing Bear. He runs a rescue operation near Pikes Peak, Colo., for abandoned hedgehogs, which became fad pets about 10 years ago.

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Posted: 06 October 2008 05:39 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
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I got a guinea pig for Jocelynn just about the time she was 2 or so.  I totally killed it…I am sure the story is here somewhere.  But that thing never stood a chance with me.  And Jocelynn was afraid of him.  She would put her hand into the cage (supervised), but as soon as he moved to be petted, she would jerk her hand out.  She always had to wash her hands after she touched the cage or anything.

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Posted: 06 October 2008 06:15 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
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Had a hamster when I was eight.. It lived to the ripe old age of three and a quarter. Amusingly, those wer ealso the years we had the most trouble, financially, so there was very little heat in the house (not *too* bad in California, but still..). As a result, the hamster actually went into hibernation a few times. Not too long, just a week or so each time, then it’d toddle out, grab a few cheekfuls of sunflower seeds, head back to nap.

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Posted: 06 October 2008 06:39 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
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“Our recommendation is that no animal should be a pet for kids 5 and under,” said Z.G. Standing Bear.

Ummm, D’uh….
That’s what plush animals are for.

I remember my parents telling me I used to pick up our cat by the tail. But I was only 2 or 3 then.

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Posted: 06 October 2008 09:38 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 4 ]
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Is the guy’s name really “Z.G. Standing Bear???“ That’s fantastic.

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Posted: 07 October 2008 10:07 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 5 ]
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. . .baby chicks, lizards and turtles. . .

First, since when have those been “exotic” or “non-traditional” pets?  Lizards and turtles are common enough in many peoples’ yards, and chickens have been kept for thousands of years.

Secondly, “baby chicks”?  As opposed to “adult chicks”?  Just what meaning of “chick” are they referring to?

Razela - 06 October 2008 09:38 PM

Is the guy’s name really “Z.G. Standing Bear???“ That’s fantastic.

Yep.

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Posted: 07 October 2008 11:05 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 6 ]
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We had chickens when I was a baby.  We also had ducks off & on.  Jason and I had turtles a few years ago.  One died, the other I set loose in my mom’s pond when I got pregnant b/c I was afraid of catching something that might be really bad while I was pregnant.  I have never seen the turtle again.

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Posted: 07 October 2008 12:56 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 7 ]
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I’ve been spending the day taking field mice BACK out to the field….not pets but apparently they think they are. 

Because we live right next to a large commons area heavy with trees and deep in wild shrubs etc. Erik has always had a house full of mice coming in made worse by the fact that I feed the wild birds with ground feeders in the front yard.  Lookachoo catches them but then just torments them to death and that’s something I’m also not tolerant of. 

We just got the kind of live rodent traps used in science field research (as opposed to earlier typical ones that let the mice dine and leave).  I started this morning taking animals out and a distance from us traveling through the dark via flashlight, two traps at a time with little pink noses pressing through the grating. 

They do look cute scampering away into the high grasses and shrubs but I haven’t been tempted to gather them back up and bring them back….......they leave a mess and they chew up clothes and electrical wiring which can be dangerous.

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Posted: 09 October 2008 04:23 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 8 ]
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That’s what plush animals are for.

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Posted: 09 October 2008 06:36 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 9 ]
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Mice are domesticated.  Even if let loose in a wild area, they will look for homes to live in.

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Posted: 09 October 2008 07:30 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 10 ]
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Maegan - 09 October 2008 06:36 AM

Mice are domesticated.  Even if let loose in a wild area, they will look for homes to live in.

Absolutely they will (hopefully not mine though once I release them)!  And I’ve kept them before but in habitrails.  These little guys are getting into clothes drawers and cupboards and food.  You can hear them in the ceiling too HAHAHA!  In such numbers they post health issues and I am estimating we probably have at least 50. 

So far I’ve released easily 15 to 20.  These are great traps though with plenty of room and one mouse trapped on a kitchen counter last night had reached out to a knit hat nearby and pulled strands of the yarn through the grating and was steadily weaving a nest.  I had a hard time disengaging the hat portion from the stuff pulled inside before I could go traipsing out into a very dark morning in my bathrobe across the commons to the end-lot wilderness to release him and another from upstairs. 

Oh, both left with full bellies.

At about 2:30 this morning I had occasion to get up in a half-sleep to use the bathroom where my ironing board remains standing open.  I turned on the light to see one of the bandits dashing and jumping down the ironing board to land on a basket of clothing at the other end. 

We have three more traps that are to arrive tomorrow.  Hopefully if I am tenatious and persevere, I’ll evict most of these while it’s warm enough outside that they’ll find new, perhaps fruitful lives elsewhere.

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Posted: 09 October 2008 07:41 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 11 ]
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Hearing about mice in the house makes me want to throw up.  I don’t know why I’m so icked out by it!  Maybe I have bad feelings towards the plague.

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Everything from the popular Farting Santa to fake Lottery Ticket stocking stuffers.