
Seemingly out of the blue, CASH has been fielding
inquiries about the likelihood of contracting leprosy from handling or being
in close proximity to an armadillo. You heard right – I did a little
research into it and decided to share what I gleaned with readers of the
Courier.
Researchers were able to confirm that about a third of
confirmed U.S. leprosy cases each year are concentrated in Louisiana and
Texas, and most of those result from contact associated with hunting,
skinning or eating armadillos.
Doctor Anthony Fauci from the National
Institutes of Health believes that when it comes to contracting leprosy,
hunters are taking unnecessary risks. “It doesn’t mean people need to run
away from armadillos,” said Dr. Fauci. “You shoot an armadillo and try to
skin it — that’s the worst thing you could do.”
Unless you’re an armadillo hunter you don’t have much to
worry about.
Richard Truman, Ph.D., the chief of microbiological
research at the National Hansen’s Disease Program, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana
says that “Leprosy is a rare disease and will remain a rare disease” because
approximately 95% of people are naturally immune and sufferers are no longer
infectious after as little as 2 weeks of treatment with antibiotics, though
it takes a one- to two-year regimen with three different drugs to completely
cure the disease.
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Joe Miele is President of the Committee to Abolish Sport
Hunting.