A kangaroo trained to detect tuberculosis by APOPO in Ethiopia - Photo: APOPO
APOPO, a Belgian non-profit organization, has been training African pouched rats for rescue missions for the past 25 years.
With their extremely sensitive noses, these rats can detect landmines and tuberculosis - even in small amounts of bacteria.
More recently, they have also been trained to detect illegally trafficked wildlife and accurately search for people trapped under rubble in disasters such as earthquakes.
Training rats to detect mines and find people
According to ABC News on September 4, APOPO experts are testing the search for people trapped after a simulated earthquake in Morogoro city in the Uluguru mountains, Tanzania.
A kangaroo wriggled through the dirt and rocks, searching for and sounding a whistle on the trapped person's bag to signal. The kangaroo then returned to its trainer to receive a banana as a reward.
APOPO also cooperated with Sokoine University of Agriculture (Tanzania) to train kangaroos to detect mines. During training, when they stop at a certain place, it means there is a mine there.
These kangaroos are preparing for their next deployment, possibly to Angola or Cambodia – where APOPO has helped clear more than 50,000 landmines since 2014.
A team of "special kangaroos" is also present in Türkiye with a partner search and rescue organization of APOPO.
Tuberculosis detection
A normal morning of a mine-detecting kangaroo - Source: APOPO/YOUTUBE
There is also a team of lab-trained kangaroos that are tasked with detecting tuberculosis. APOPO believes that these kangaroos are one of the most effective TB detection “devices” in the world and has deployed them in Tanzania, Ethiopia and Mozambique.
Kangaroos help doctors detect cases of tuberculosis that might otherwise go unnoticed, helping to prevent people from unwittingly spreading the deadly disease. They can sniff 100 samples in 20 minutes. They have identified more than 30,000 patients who were discharged from hospital but were actually still carrying the bacteria.
With just one lab, APOPO can use kangaroos to do the amount of work (identifying TB patients) of 55 hospitals in one day.
However, using living organisms as medical devices also poses challenges, especially in terms of scale. Samples must be brought directly to the lab with enough trained mice to detect tuberculosis.
Additionally, using kangaroos to detect disease has also been met with skepticism from regulators and the medical community.
African giant pouched rat
The African giant pouched rat (cricetomys ansorgei) has a head-body length of 25 - 30cm and a tail length of 30 - 35cm, weighing about 1 - 1.3kg.
Kangaroos begin training for special missions shortly after birth. With an average lifespan of around 10 years, they can perform rescue missions for many years. The cost of training a rat is around $6,990.
Source: https://tuoitre.vn/loai-chuot-tui-biet-do-min-phat-hien-benh-lao-va-tim-nguoi-bi-mac-ket-20250905154357041.htm
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