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ARTICLE |

HUMAN TUBERCULOSIS AND HOUSEHOLD PETS.

JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(1):47. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450530053014.
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ABSTRACT

The claim has frequently been made that children often become infected with certain diseases which are brought to them from other children by pet animals, such as cats and dogs, or indeed, that these animals may themselves be suffering from maladies which are capable of transmission to the human being, but while many physicians believe in the truth of these assertions, definite evidence has not yet been largely accumulated. It is also a known fact that some pet animals and birds are susceptible to tuberculosis, and while in the case of birds the bacillus is somewhat different from that which occurs in the human body, it has been supposed that this difference is simply produced by its surroundings, and that it is capable under certain circumstances of affecting human beings. Our attention has been called to this matter by an article by Tucker Wise, in which he brings forward certain

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