Queen Camilla was joined by James Middleton, the brother of the Princess of Wales, at Clarence House today as she welcomed cancer-detecting dogs to the royal residence
Queen Camilla was joined by the Princess of Wales’s brother as she held a reception in honour of cancer-detecting dogs and welcomed them to Clarence House today.
James Middleton, who is known for his love of dogs, was seen greeting Camilla with a kiss on the cheek as they welcomed two pooches trained by Medical Detection Dogs to sniff out signs of cancer in humans.
The Queen patted the heads of golden Labrador Jodie and fox red Labrador Floren, who waited for her in the royal residence’s hallway today. Floren, 11, has been trained to detect prostate cancer, while Jodie, nine, can pick up the disease in the bowel. The Queen smiled as Jodie showed off her skills by spotting the disease among four urine samples.
READ MORE: Disgraced Andrew fails to respond to request to give up one of last remaining honoursREAD MORE: Princess Charlotte ‘allowed to follow different path’ in new William and Kate era
Mr Middleton’s dog food company, Ella & Co, donates treats to Medical Detection Dogs and told the Queen he was “mind-blown” by what the dogs have been trained to do.
Camilla was also shown an “electronic nose” developed to replicate the animals’ diagnostic abilities, though she said “nature will always lead the way” and “we’re always going to need the dogs”.
After the demonstration and speeches, Camilla requested that the canines be brought back to Clarence House soon and said: “I think it’s becoming a second home for the dogs. We’ve had so many people here, and a lot of sceptical people who come and have gone away transformed.”
Scepticism on this medical use of canines still exists, and Camilla added: “We’ll just have to bring more people back here… and more dogs.”
The Queen also met black Labrador Wolfie, six, who is trained to alert owner Lucy Burls before a spike in symptoms of her Postural Tachycardia Syndrome (PoTS). Ms Burls, 39, said Wolfie will usually alert her by making eye contact, but if her condition worsens, he will rest his head on her lap.
She said Camilla was surprised to learn Wolfie can travel with Ms Burls on planes and even speedboats for a holiday. He particularly enjoys double-decker buses, Ms Burls said.
The electronic nose device was developed by the charity and Dr Andreas Mershin, from RealNose.AI. Dr Mershin put the technology in the Queen’s hands and blew into it to demonstrate its ability to pick up scent. Camilla joked that the dogs were far faster, only taking about four seconds.
Whereas the machine, she was told, takes about 10 minutes to detect cancer. Dr Mershin said: “The dogs are leading, they’re still beating us on every metric, we have to start somewhere, and the best thing is to compete against them.”
The Queen said: “Nature will always lead the way. However brilliant, as the machine is, we’re always going to need the dogs”, she added, telling the engineer: “It’s fascinating, thank you very much… I shall look forward to an update.”
Camilla has been Patron of Medical Detection Dogs (MDD) since 2014. In recent years, Her Majesty has seen many Bio Detection Dogs at work, such as cancer detection dogs and Covid-19 detection dogs.
MDD trains dogs to save lives using their sense of smell. It does this with Medical Alert Assistance Dogs and Bio Detection Dogs, both of which can be trained to detect even the tiniest trace of the smell caused by a medical condition.



You must be logged in to post a comment Login