Afraid to Touch my Chicks

Anianna

Songster
9 Years
Feb 28, 2010
959
23
143
N/E of Richmond, VA
I have salmonella, probably not from my chicks, but I have been so frighteningly, terribly sick that I am now afraid to touch my chicks at all. I am in so much pain and haven't been able to eat for weeks. I pretty much sleep for 20 hours a day and am incredibly tired the four for which I am awake. I have an immune deficiency that makes me more susceptible to infection, but I do wash my hands fastidiously. Anyway, please make sure you and your kids/family wash hands after handling chickens, eggs, or bedding material. You do not want to get this. I wouldn't wish this on my worst enemy.
 
I'm also immune suppressed, and was worried about this too. But... unless you live in a plastic bubble these days... we're exposed to so many awful bacteria's just living our day to day lives that we can't avoid. So I don't let it keep me from handling my chicks, I just always make sure to scrub with a good soap and hot water after handling them.
 
I have had such a horrible season with pneumonia, strep, salmonella, etc. I would like my bubble now.
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Yes, salmonella can be transmitted in their feces and good hand washing practices are usually enough. We don't know for sure how I got it and my doc thinks I most likely have a food-borne strain and it is just a coincidence that we got the chicks right after I got infected.

I am afraid to clean the brooder now. I used to wear gloves and scooped the bedding out (washing thoroughly afterward, of course), but now I've ordered a shop vac so I don't have to handle the stuff at all. Of course, now I have to wait for the vac to show up and the poos are building up, which doesn't help my state of mind. I know it's pretty irrational, but this kind of misery can really mess with your head.
 
To be honest, the shop vac is probably going to kick up more stuff into the air than just hand-moving the stuff would. It sounded like your first method was the most sanitary.

You might want to also look into a brooder with a wire bottom and a slide-out tray. I wanted one myself because they are soooooooooooooooo easy to clean, but they can be expensive. My solution to that was to buy a guinea pig cage at PetSmart with a wire bottom. It's not fancy, but it's essentially the same. This method of brooding also is healthier on the chicks as they don't have to stand in their own waste all day.

PS: please don't leave your chicks unchanged while you wait for supplies. It would be cruel to make them sit in their own filth because of something they had no part in. Do you know anyone that can change the cage for you if you absolutely can't stand to do it yourself? Their tiny lives are in your hands, they don't deserve to get sick and die in excrement.
 

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