Please click HERE to read the current CDC guidelines regarding COVID and Animals.
Clear Health Pass® Is A Minority/Veteran Operated Organization and an appointed Tribal Agent For Federally Recognized Native American Tribes.
We were founded with one mission in mind. To Save Lives.
We do this by launching groundbreaking, non-invasive saliva tests for COVID-19 and a plethora of other medical conditions and diseases with in-store and online delivery. These tests will diagnose cancers, neurological conditions, heart disease, low testosterone, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, stroke and suicide prediction and so much more.
We also have a telehealth platform that works with our test kits for results and diagnosis, and connects our customers to a network of top doctors and nurses making CHP a one stop shop that both enables and empowers our customers to take their heath care into their own hands.
With this combination of diagnostic test kits and telehealth platform, Clear Health Pass® hopes to help save as many if not more lives than were lost to this deadly pandemic by empowering everyone to take their health care into their own hands.
Clear Health Pass® saw a need for COVID-19 testing options for our pets when we started seeing articles about pets of infected families in China being euthanized.
Numerous studies have shown that this virus has the ability to transmit back and fourth between humans and animals.
Having your pet tested will give you information you need to know to keep yourself and your family safe as well as to help prevent further spread and mutations of the virus.
There are many hazardous implications that this has on the potential for the virus to evolve and mutate in our pets and be transmitted back to us or to other animals, and we need more testing and data to track and understand this to know how to combat it.
This virus is still rapidly changing and evolving and the more we know, the quicker we can implement solutions.
While our main focus right now is getting this test out there for COVID, the potential for other options is exciting.
Soon, this test will become an à la carte test in which you can choose what additional conditions you’d like to test for with a single sample. Once our lab receives the specimen, results will be available in 24-48 hours.
Some potential options might include diabetes, Lyme, parasites, and more.
All household pets should be tested.
Our kit includes a simple scoop for collection of your pets fecal matter or poop. Once you have put the specimen into the collection tube, you use our prepaid mailer to send the sample into our lab.
Typical results can be expected within 24-48 hours of the lab receiving the sample.
We have various testing protocols. We use PCR, LAMP, LAMP CRISPR, a combination, or NGS, or “Next Generation Sequencing”
Once you suspect a possible infection of your pet, quarantine your pet and wear a mask and gloves whenever you need to come in contact or care for your pet. This includes when cleaning up their feces and handling their food and water.
It is also imperative during this time that you do not associate your pet with any other animals or humans until a negative result is received.
Re-test your pet 5 days to one week later until you receive a negative result. Continue the methods above until you receive a negative result.
Follow the same steps as above to keep the infection from spreading to your pet.
Current research shows that contracting COVID from animals is rare if there is not close contact with the animal. Safety precautions like wearing proper PPE are recommended if you must make close contact with an infected pet.
Yes. If you have any suspicion that you our your pet may have been in contact with any one or any animal infected or are showing any signs or symptoms of infection, bot you, your pet, and your household should be tested.
According to researchers, Humans, ferrets, cats, civets and dogs are most susceptible to infection with the new coronavirus.
Direct transmission is when you directly infect a pet. Indirect transmission means that you infect one animal that then that transfers the illness to another animal.
An example of this might be that you infect a cat who then passes the infection to a dog.
Symptoms can include anything from respiratory to arthritis. Most often the animal may either have no symptoms or display the same symptoms that you see within humans.