Cyprus’ veterinarians on Friday lauded a government decision to allow its stock of human coronavirus medication to be used on cats to fight a local mutation of a feline virus that has killed thousands of animals on the Mediterranean island.
The veterinarians’ association said in a statement that it had petitioned the Government for access to the medication at “reasonable prices” from the beginning of this year, when the mutation that causes lethal Feline Infectious Peritonitis (Fip) began to noticeably crop up in the Mediterranean island’s cat population.
“We want to assure that we will continue to investigate and control the rise in case of FCov-2023,” the association said.
Local animal activists had claimed that the mutation had killed as many as 300,000 cats, but association president Nektaria Ioannou Arsenoglou says that’s an exaggeration.