Latest News from BPCA

06 May 2021

Can rodents transmit Covid-19? A government report

Defra and the Joint Biosecurity Centre (JBC) have presented a paper on the risk of SARS-CoV-2 infections in rodents occurring from exposure to humans.

can-rodents-transmit-covid

The paper was presented on 8 April 2021 and focused on answering three crucial questions:

  1. What is the likelihood of Covid-19 remaining viable in the environment and wastewater such that a rodent could become infected?
  2. What is the likelihood that a variant of concern (VOC) of Covid-19 could infect a rodent and produce sustained population-level transmission?
  3. What is the likelihood that a human is exposed to an infectious dose of the virus through contact with rodents via pest control, waste management or wastewater management?

The paper outlines that there is significant potential for key risk factors to occur and have been observed to occur in controlled conditions.

However, there is a high degree of uncertainty that these can occur in the wild.

The most significant gap in knowledge flagged in the report is whether the rodents that do contract a strain of Covid-19 that is of concern to humans, can pass it to one another (creating a reservoir) and then further passing it on to people.

This would be particularly concerning to occupational workers, such as pest professionals.

What are the risks for Covid-19 transmission via rats?

The government report outlines that the risk of Covid-19 remaining in such levels as to be infectious in waste is very low (>1%).

However, if a Covid-19 strain could survive long enough in waste, then the likelihood of a human-to-rodent crossover is high (66-90%), given the considerable interaction between rodents and potentially contaminated human waste.

The level of contact between humans and rats which could potentially lead to new cases is very low for the general population and restricted mainly to occupational exposure [for example, pest professionals].

The executive report states:

“The level of contact between humans and rats which could potentially lead to new cases is very low for the general population and restricted mainly to occupational exposure [for example, pest professionals].

“The potential for this to lead to an outbreak (where human-to-human transmission occurs) will depend on the immune status of the population, the vaccine efficacy and level of circulating variants”.

Authors suspect that any Covid-19 strain which moves human-to-rodent would adapt rapidly to a rodent-to-rodent transmission and therefore be highly unlikely to move back to a rodent-to-human transmission.

Much of the report admits a high level of uncertainty - however, this should not stop us seriously considering the impacts of the report.

Should we be concerned by the report findings?

The paper clarifies that if a viable transmission route is identified, there will be a medium risk to professionals working in proximity to rodents and waste (10-66% or one case a fortnight).

While the findings haven’t been proved with any degree of certainty, we should still keep the report in mind.

Measures you can take to minimise potential transmission:

  • Employ safe systems of work around rodent carcasses, including their removal and disposal
  • Ensure that you have appropriate PPE and use it correctly at all times
  • Identify contamination pathways, including direct and indirect contact with rodents, particularly in high-risk environments such as around food and biological waste.

Final thoughts

As an industry, we’ve been working with infectious and commutable diseases for a long time.

Although this link between rodents and Covid-19 is undoubtedly alarming, many (if not all) of the risk mitigation measures will already be standard practice for pest professionals.

BPCA will continue to monitor any new data or studies linking pests and Covid-19.

Got more questions about Covid and keeping your team safe?

Our technical team are on hand to help members with any of their concerns. Contact us today.

technical@bpca.org.uk

Source: Online

Highlights View all news

05 January 2026

Latest news

Glue trap SALES ban moves a step closer following BPCA lobbying

Proposals to pave the way for a ban on the sale of rodent glue traps across the UK will be debated in Parliament this week.

Read more

15 December 2025

Latest news

BPCA wrapped 2025: a message to members from Rosina Robson

In this video, Rosina Robson, Chief Executive of the British Pest Control Association, reflects on a year of momentum, challenge and progress for the Association.

Read more

31 October 2025

Latest news

VIDEO: Consumer vulnerability: recognising the signs, reducing the risks with Louise Baxter MBE

Louise Baxter MBE, Head of the National Trading Standards Scams Team and Non-Executive Director at TrustMark, explores what consumer vulnerability really means in 2025 and how it affects the work you do every day.

Read more
Latest View all news

06 January 2026

Latest news

Free AI webinars to help pest management businesses grow smarter

BPCA is encouraging members to explore a new free CPD opportunity designed to help small and medium-sized pest management businesses use artificial intelligence in a practical, responsible way.

Read more

05 January 2026

Latest news

Animal welfare strategy puts traps and wildlife control under review

The government has published its Animal Welfare Strategy for England, setting out a series of commitments that could have significant implications for wildlife control and pest management activity.

Read more

05 January 2026

Latest news

Glue trap SALES ban moves a step closer following BPCA lobbying

Proposals to pave the way for a ban on the sale of rodent glue traps across the UK will be debated in Parliament this week.

Read more