Trupanion Partners with Leading Pet and Public Health Authorities to Launch Pet & Public Health Early Warning and Detection System
By:
Trupanion, Inc. via
GlobeNewswire
August 14, 2024 at 09:00 AM EDT
SEATTLE, Aug. 14, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Trupanion, Inc. (Nasdaq: TRUP), the leading provider of medical insurance for cats and dogs in North America, in partnership with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and leading pet industry partners, today announced the formation of a collaborative Advisory Board to launch a Pet & Public Health Early Warning & Detection System. The Advisory Board will also be joined by Boehringer Ingelheim, Mars Science & Diagnostics, and other leading pet, public health and animal health authorities. The Early Warning & Detection System will be centered around Trupanion’s patented Veterinary Portal technology, which is already active in over 10,000 veterinary hospitals in North America and expanding globally. While purposely built as a tool to pay veterinary hospitals directly for Trupanion-insured members in real-time, there is a significant and immediate public health benefit that previously had not been leveraged. This technology will serve as a link to finding and analyzing signs of illness and health patterns in dogs and cats across breed, age, geography and more. Real-time pet illness data offer critical insights into trends impacting companion animals and could help address a gap in surveillance by providing more data on pet illnesses. By making this data available to the Pet & Public Health Early Warning Advisory Board, Trupanion aims to help address the gap, enabling early detection and response to potential threats to pets and public health, ensuring a comprehensive approach to safeguarding the well-being of pets, their families, and the global community. Dr. Steve Weinrauch, BVMS, MRCVS, Trupanion’s Chief Veterinary & Product Officer noted, “The veterinary profession serves as a first line of defense for protecting both pets and public health. Empowering those entrusted with the care of our family pets is vital. Using real-time illness data, the Early Warning & Detection System concept could one day help to rapidly detect patterns and signs of illness in dogs and cats anywhere, any breed, any age, any sex, any time. For example, if young, female Poodles are coughing in Southern California, we could know in real-time and take quick action to determine any risks to pet health or public health.” Dr. Weinrauch added, “Early detection has global public health benefits. It could slow the spread of disease, speed treatment or alert to a brewing epidemic or pandemic. It could one day even help alert us to viruses such as those typically only identified in production animals if they jump to our household companions.” Dr. Casey Barton Behravesh, Director of CDC’s One Health Office says, “Healthy pets make healthy people. Early warning systems through public-private One Health partnerships can help fill gaps in data on illnesses in pets. This information can be applied to public health so we can better protect our pets, our families, and our communities.” CDC's One Health Office recognizes that the health of people is connected to the health of animals and our shared environment. A One Health approach encourages collaborative efforts of many experts (like disease detectives, laboratorians, physicians, and veterinarians) working across human, animal, and environmental health to improve the health of people and animals, including pets, livestock, and wildlife. Initial Focus: Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza A(H5N1) or H5N1 Bird Flu One of the first initiatives of the Pet & Public Health Early Warning Advisory Board will be to increase awareness of H5N1 bird flu in the veterinary community. “Based on the information available at this time, CDC believes the risk to the U.S. general public from H5N1 bird flu remains low. To date, H5N1 bird flu has been detected in four people who had direct contact with infected dairy cows, and 10 people involved with depopulation of poultry at a poultry facility experiencing an outbreak of H5N1 bird flu virus. However, an increase in infection among cats exposed to infected dairy cows has been reported recently, and these cats became seriously ill and the majority died,” said Dr. Casey Barton Behravesh. “At Trupanion, we’re committed to using our real-time and historical data for the benefit of pets and public health,” stated Dr. Weinrauch. “We look forward to further exciting announcements on our joint efforts in the near future.” Dr. Barton Behravesh added, “We’re pleased to have Trupanion’s support and reach, providing unique resources and data to veterinarians.” While the current risk to people and pets without exposure to infected wild birds, poultry or cows remains low, pet parents and veterinary professionals can stay up to date with the latest information:
Pet & Public Health Early Warning Advisory Board Information & Resources About Trupanion Forward-Looking Statements Trupanion Contacts:
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