Can dogs detect COVID-19? Canines in training to sniff out virus
Milton, Apr 22: Can dogs detect COVID-19? A British charity believes so, and has begun training canines to sniff out the coronavirus following previous screening success with various illnesses.
Medical Detection Dogs, set up in 2008 to harness dogs' sharp sense of smell to detect human diseases, started working on the project late last month.

In its training room in Milton Keynes, in central England, the dogs are being intensively trained to sniff out samples of the virus, and indicate when they have found it to receive a treat.
The approach is based on a belief that each disease triggers a distinct odour, which canines are uniquely well-placed to smell. The charity has previously worked with its dogs to detect cancers, Parkinson's disease and bacterial infections using samples taken from patients.
"We believe dogs can detect COVID-19 and will be able to screen hundreds of people very, very rapidly so we know who needs to be tested and isolated," Claire Guest, founder and chief executive of Medical Detection Dogs, told AFP.
"We have evidence that dogs can detect bacterias and other diseases, so we believe that taking this project forward will make a huge difference to the ability to control COVID-19 spread."
Guest is working with the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) and Durham University in northeast England -- the same team that recently collaborated to show dogs can be trained to detect malaria. James Logan, head of the LSHTM's disease control department, said that project demonstrated dogs can smell odours from humans with "extremely high accuracy".
He added there was "a very high chance" that they would be able to detect COVID-19 in a similar way and potentially "revolutionise our response" to the disease.
The team is aiming to train the dogs over a six-week period to help provide the "rapid, non-invasive diagnosis" tool.
Canines can also detect subtle changes in skin temperature, potentially making them useful in determining if a person has a fever. If successful, the four-legged detection devices could be deployed at airports to identify people carrying the virus, according to Steve Lindsay from Durham University.
The number of coronavirus cases around the world has now soared to 1,246,840, according to the latest figures Wednesday compiled by AFP from official sources.
The number of actual infections is believed to be higher since many countries are only testing severe cases or patients requiring hospitalisation.
-
Gold Silver Rate Today, 4 April 2026: Check City-Wise Gold, Silver Prices and MCX Trend -
Hyderabad Weather Update: IMD Issues Yellow Alert As Thunderstorms Likely Across Telangana Till April 7 -
Latest Gold Silver Rate In Hyderabad, 4 April 2026: Fresh 18K, 22K, 24K Gold and Silver Prices -
Gold Rate Today 4 April 2026: Check Fresh IBJA Gold Rates, Tanishq, Kalyan, Malabar, Joyalukkas Prices -
IPL 2026 GT vs RR: Shubman Gill Out, Rashid Khan Captains Gujarat Titans vs Rajasthan Royals At Ahmedabad -
How Iran Brought Down US Military A-10 ‘Warthog’: IRGC Releases Video -
Dhurandhar 2 Box Office Collection: Ranveer’s Flick Defies Weekday Dip, Charges Ahead Towards ₹1,000 Cr India -
Karnataka 2nd PUC Results On This Date, Check 2nd PUC Result 2026 Karnataka Date And Time -
US Air Force’s ‘Swiss Army Knives’ Lead High-Risk Search And Rescue Mission For Missing Pilot In Iran -
We’re In War: Donald Trump Says US Aircraft Loss Won’t Derail Iran Talks -
India Says Iranian Oil Supply Secure, Rejects Tanker Diversion Reports Linked To Payment Issues -
Sunny Leone Faces Abuse As Tommy Gunn Shares ‘Throwback’ Photo












Click it and Unblock the Notifications