
Last year around this time, were were talking a lot about a cluster of cases of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (RMSF) in dogs (and people) associated with Long Point, Ontario. Prior to 2025, we didn’t consider this tickborne disease to be established in the province, but then we detected multiple confirmed cases in dogs, two confirmed cases in humans, and ticks carrying the causative organism (Rickettsia rickettsii) all in (or linked to) Long Point. We assumed we’d see more in 2026 again, but the only way to know was to wait and see.
Because RMSF is not a reportable or notifiable disease in Ontario, we only find out about cases through people, physicians, veterinarians and others who let us know about them, or who ask for advice about suspicious cases. Even if we knew about all the diagnosed cases in the province, we’d still only be getting a partial picture, because for an infected dog to get diagnosed and for us to hear about it, a bunch of things need to happen:
- the dog has to get sick (not all of them do)
- the dog has to be taken to a veterinarian
- the veterinarian needs to consider RMSF (which could be easily missed, since this is an emerging disease in our area)
- the owner needs to agree to (and pay for) testing
- the test has to be positive
- someone needs to pick up the phone or send an email to let us know
There are lots of places along that cascade where we can lose a case, so the ones we hear about are no doubt only a subset of the cases that actually occur.
This year (2026), as part of an Ontario Animal Health Network (OAHN) project, we are testing blood samples from dogs in the Long Point area to see if any/some/many have antibodies against R. rickettsii, to help give us an idea of how much this pathogen may be circulating under the radar. Stay tuned for more updates later in the summer!
We’re also focusing on passive surveillance, i.e. encouraging people to let us know about any confirmed or suspicious cases of RMSF in dogs, and collecting as much information about each case as we can. I’m a bit surprised I haven’t heard about more cases so far, but there has been at least one positive dog that visited Long Point regularly. Long Point is a vacation home area, which complicates surveillance because many dogs may visit the area and potentially get infected, but they get sick back at home and go to their local veterinarian, who may not be aware of the risk for RMSF, especially if they don’t ask about travel history. I’ve also heard that there were other sick dogs in the area, but that’s getting into anecdotes (which can be useful but may also be questionable).
What we can say is: RMSF is back again (or more accurately, it hasn’t gone away, so we’re seeing seasonal cases again, as would be expected). I think we can confidently say there’s ongoing risk to dogs and people that live at or visit Long Point. We can also confidently say that the risk should extend to adjacent areas, but we don’t know how far that risk extends. Had all the dogs around Long Point been seronegative (no antibodies against R. rickettsii), then testing dogs from farther away would have been pretty low yield. But as we learn more about what’s going on at Long Point, we can better design our next surveillance steps.
In the interim, tick avoidance remains paramount, particularly in Long Point, including avoiding high-risk tick environments (e.g. long grass), doing diligent tick checks (daily – for dogs and people), and keeping dogs on a good tick preventive medication (which is helpful but does not guarantee full protection from RMSF).










