Hayley Yaglom, a TGen genomic epidemiologist and trained veterinarian, takes a blood sample from a dog in Flagstaff, where TGen’s infectious disease branch is located. (Courtesy photo by TGen) Taylor Harris’ 5-year-old cat, Sid Vicious, is celebrating Halloween. Months earlier, he was ill with what his vet had diagnosed as COVID-19. Harris thinks he might have got it from Harris’ …
(AP Photo / Kirsty Wigglesworth) PHOENIX – The Translational Genome Research Institute started a study on Wednesday testing dogs and cats from Arizona that were infected with COVID-19. Read moreMaking a extra compassionate world for group catsTGen hopes to study SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, in animals to see if there is any evidence that pets can transmit the …
IMAGE: Hayley Yaglom, TGen genomic epidemiologist and lead researcher on a project to test pets for COVID-19, takes a blood sample from a dog. view More Image Credit: Photo: Courtesy of TGen. PHOENIX, Ariz., March 10 / PRNewswire / – The Translational Genome Research Institute (TGen), a City of Hope subsidiary, today announced the start of a new scientific study: …