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  • As we start to better understand the coronavirus, health experts are worried it could rival

  • the most devastating health crises in recent decades.

  • Patients with coronavirus may have mild or no symptoms and still be spreading it.

  • They have no fevers, no cough.

  • You could be unknowingly, unwittingly, unintentionally spreading this.

  • To add to this it's believed the coronavirus is more contagious than seasonal flu.

  • Any method of disrupting the cycle of infection is worthy of our attention.

  • Scientists in London who've had success in detecting malaria have an unlikely method

  • they think could be used in preventing the spread of COVID-19.

  • When you have an infection your body odor, the smells coming from your body, change.

  • Which is detectable by mosquitoes.

  • So mosquitoes find you more attractive when you have a malaria infection.

  • We wondered whether dogs could do the same.

  • The amazing thing about dogs is they've got an incredible sense of smell,

  • they've got a very sensitive nose.

  • But they are also able to learn and they can learn smells.

  • So by combining the two we were able to train dogs

  • to be able to detect the smell of malaria

  • very effectively above the World Health Organization

  • standards for malaria diagnostic.

  • So there is a very, very good chance that COVID-19 also has a distinctive odor.

  • And if it does, then I am really confident that the dogs

  • would be able to learn that smell and detect it.

  • And how do you think it could revolutionize our response to COVID-19,

  • having that kind of test available?

  • One of the main benefits of it would be that we can rapidly find

  • people who have an infection but don't have any symptoms.

  • So normally we screen people for malaria when they present

  • with the symptoms of malaria and find out if they have it.

  • What dogs would be able to do with odors is find people

  • who are showing no symptoms.

  • So those are the people who will carry on a cycle of infection.

  • This is in it's very early stages, do you have a time frame?

  • So we're hoping that within two to three months

  • we would have dogs actually deployed and being

  • out there working to detect.

  • It's going to be really important that we can monitor people

  • coming in and out of the country, of any country really,

  • that is potentially infected. So a screening process to allow

  • us to do that I think would be very useful,

  • This is really a form of screening a large number of people.

As we start to better understand the coronavirus, health experts are worried it could rival

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