'A little princess': Meet Maci, the 1st Canadian dog to test positive for COVID-19 - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 10:47 AM | Calgary | -16.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Hamilton

'A little princess': Meet Maci, the 1st Canadian dog to test positive for COVID-19

Maci, a four-year-old poodle-bichon from the Niagara Region, is the first Canadian dog to test positive for COVID-19.

'She has a tiny, little legacy that she can leave behind,' says Tanja Loeb

Maci, a four-year-old poodle-bichon mix, was the first dog in Canada to test positive for COVID-19. (Submitted by Tanja Loeb)

Maci weighs five kilograms, is "kind of a littleprincess," and happens to be the first Canadian dog to test positive for COVID-19.

An active case of the virus was discovered in the four-year-oldpoodle-bichonmix after she was tested by researchers from theUniversity of Guelph's Ontario Veterinary College.

"She's just a sweet little thing," said her owner, Tanja Loeb.

"She's definitely a lapdog. She knows she's one of the only girls in our house and we just love her to pieces, so we just spoil her like crazy."

Maci was swabbed after four people in a Niagara Region household, including Loeb, tested positive for the virus.

Their other dog, Theo (short for "Theo-dorable," Loebjoked) was alsodetermined to be border-line positive for COVID-19, leading researchers to suggesthe was infected earlier or at a lower level.

Both humans and dogs are doing well now, Loeb said, and the family is grateful for that.

"For me, it started with a cough and fever and quite a bad headache," she explained.

Loeb was the first to fall ill, but within a matter of days, three others showed symptoms. Two other family members tested negative and the house was quickly divided at the direction of public health.

"We actually had to split our house into two areas, the positives and the negatives," said Loeb.

The Niagara woman said she's cautious about sharing her experience because she doesn't want to dramatizewhat happened and make people fearful. Butwhen her test results came back, she said, herinitial reaction was "terror" at the thought of who she could have exposed.

Her first thoughts were of extended family members. Then, as she lay in bed petting Maci, another possibility struck her.

Maci, right, tested positive for COVID-19. The results for Theo, the family's other dog, were only border-line positive. (Submitted by Tanja Loeb)

"My dogs were lying beside me. They didn't leave my side. It occurred to me, 'I wonder if I can pass this to them?'"

Loeb called her vet and asked if there wereany research projects about COVID-19 and dogs underway to better understand the risk her animals could pose to people and other pets.

The vet's officeconnected her with the college and Dr. Scott Weese, chief of infection control. He came out and tested both dogs that same day.

While Maci is the first confirmed positiveCanadian researchers have found, she probably isn't the first dog to have the virus. And she likelywon't be the last.

Dogscan be infected with COVID-19, but the majority of them don't get sick and seem to get over the disease relatively quickly, Weese said.

Scott Weese, chief of infection control at the University of Guelph's Ontario Veterinary College, is part of the team that confirmed the first active case of COVID-19 in a Canadian dog. (Monty Kruger/CBC)

The news might cause animal lovers to fret, but the professor stressed it doesn't change the messaging to pet owners. If you have COVID-19 in your household, your dog needs to isolate too.

"Dogs in particular are the innocent bystanders in this," said Weese. "They get infected by us ... andthe odds of that going any further beyond that dog, I think, are very low."

Loeb says Maci and Theodid not appear sick, something she says should bea comfort to other owners.

That doesn't mean their owners weren'tworried.

"Our whole family was really concerned," she said. "The two [people] that were negative wanted to either take the dogs to their area of the house and not let us be near them or vice versa. As a family, we all had a discussion about it and just decided we better find out."

Leaving a 'little legacy'

By the time they heard back from Weese and his team, everyone was feeling better, Loeb said. So she never feared for her pets.

"It was just 'Wow, way to go, dogs! Without even knowing, you guys have really made a contribution and helped us understand more.'"

Loeb says Maci and the rest of her family is doing well now. (Submitted by Tanja Loeb)

Both dogs will be part of antibody testing to help researchers figure out howCOVID-19affects pets and prepare for the next virus.

Loeb said she'dencourage other owners who havethe virus to get their animals tested.

She's proud of her pooches, especially the princess.

"I feel like Maci now has established herself in her world," she said with a laugh."She has a tiny, little legacy that she can leave behind and that's kind of nice."