I do. I'm a salmonella survivor. When i was young I was hospitalized for nearly a week with a fever exceeding 106. Sll i can really remember waa the abdomen pain. I liken it to the image of razor blades grinding against each other in your belly.I think some of this thread is infected with corona paranoia. People with their pet chickens or backyard flocks are not substantial risks to cross-species disease transmission.
I've lived my entire life cuddling chickens, as did my entire family for generations. Not going to stop because someone thinks they're ready to 'burst' with diseases at any time. Some of my chickens have lived with the described disease pressure for 13+ years. Not exactly succumbing easily!
Also, where are indoor raised closed flocks getting mites and salmonella? That's an interesting idea.
If you're talking about the people who let chickens inside and outside... If a chicken has mites *you know* if you're handling them. Salmonella? Other chicken diseases that are usually symptomatic and result in death? I have considered that possibility, but then if they were infected, they probably wouldn't be happily romping in my house. Serious chicken illnesses usually result in death rather quickly.
Have you ever considered what your dog is carrying, for that matter? Or your own microbiomes? We can be paranoid, or we can trust our immune systems and live our lives. I, for one, am going to do the latter, combined with a little common sense.
If these were major problems, most of us would have some foul stories to tell about sickness and death in our families. And yet most of us don't.
My mother told me i was on deaths doorstep. My great grandmother nearly got into a fist fight with doctors because they were letting it "run its course" and she was the one who got them to give me medicine and ice baths, essentially saving my life.
If you want to wrap a chicken in a diaper and let it walk around your house, that's your business. Snuggle and cuddle until your heart's content. But don't ignore the risk, especially if you have small children who like to put things in their mouth.
The current atmosphere with the virus is concerning and reactions are a little exaggerated. But its an effort to prevent something from entering your home and body that can make you sick. Choosing to keep a chicken as a pet indoors, is choosing to invite something into your home that can make you sick.
Again, your house, your choice, your business.