home Information and Resources Indoor microbiology is not just about people: e.g., see this discussion of sanitation in animal shelters from #UCDavis Koret Shelter Medicine Program

Indoor microbiology is not just about people: e.g., see this discussion of sanitation in animal shelters from #UCDavis Koret Shelter Medicine Program

Much of the work on microbiology of the built environment focuses attention on issues relating to humans.  But all those other animals that spend time in built environments are important parts of the bigger picture.  Animals certainly influence what microbes are found in the built environment.  And they are important customers of knowledge about the built environment.  See for example this discussion: Sanitation in animal shelters | UC Davis Koret Shelter Medicine Program.  Most of it focuses on pathogens/nasty microbes of course.  But it does have some interesting pointers on places to find nasty microbes.  Would be good to look at microbial diversity broadly in animal shelters to go along with the culturing focus on pathogens.

One thought on “Indoor microbiology is not just about people: e.g., see this discussion of sanitation in animal shelters from #UCDavis Koret Shelter Medicine Program

  1. That’s a nice resource, thanks for that.

    Just last weekend I took a course on emergency animal shelters. They covered some of the risks. But you have to balance that with the need to let the animals have some scents of their own around to calm them. Sterilizing everything and making it too clean actually stresses them more, and in an emergency shelter they are already is a rough state.

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