Veterinary technicians continue to struggle with low pay, compassion fatigue and burnout, as well as a lack of recognition and career advancement opportunities. Underutilization was the main topic during the AVMA’s house of delegates Veterinary Information Forum. Discussions included: how to encourage the consistent use of credentialed veterinary technicians as part of … [Read more...]
Opinion – Exploration of veterinary shortages in the wake of the Veterinary Feed Directive
The findings in this report offer no great surprise. Many geographic areas were identified across the United States where food animal veterinary services may be inadequate to implement the Veterinary Feed Directive and meet other producer needs. Consider however, many animal health pros believe the VFD is the tip of the iceberg for antibiotic vigilance. What happens when … [Read more...]
Vet professionals more likely to be hurt on the job than firefighters
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, people in the veterinary services profession were the second most likely to have nonfatal injuries in 2016, behind nursing and residential care workers and ahead of truss makers, police officers, and firefighters. About 12 percent of people in the veterinary services profession reported work-related injuries or illnesses—four times … [Read more...]
November JAVMA
The research continues. This issue of JAVMA includes a commentary on engaging a veterinary behaviorist to help pets with behavior problems early instead of as a last resort: Veterinary behaviorists should be the first, not the last, resort for optimal patient care, Link. Asking clients about behavior problems during appointments can be difficult for veterinarians. . . … [Read more...]
Animals served by nonprofit spay-neuter clinics often not vaccinated for rabies
The latest JAVMA is out. The paper <link> profiling spay-neuter clinic clients and pets is of profound interest to animal health pros who sometimes refer to these locations as price competitors. Note the high percentage of animals without basic rabies protection. Respondents indicated that 49% of dogs and 77% of cats had not been examined previously by a veterinarian, … [Read more...]
As CWD spreads in cervids, states also monitor humans
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a disease that kills deer, elk, reindeer and moose or, cervids. Misfolded prion proteins can spread among cervids through saliva and excrement. These proteins may remain viable in environments for decades. The parallels to Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease has scientists monitoring CWD more closely as it has spread to 20 or more states in the wild deer … [Read more...]
Exploding wild horse and burros population straining BLM
The Bureau of Land Management's Wild Horse and Burro program is at a crossroads. Too few wild horses and burros are placed into private homes each year. At the same time, herds on public lands continue to increase rapidly. There were 81,951 animals on 26.9 million acres of public rangelands and 44,730 animals in corrals or pastures as of mid-2018 . . . . . . perspective, the … [Read more...]
Opinion – Chew on this blast from the past
AHD editor, Rick Purnell, found a dental care brochure in a media kit from 2007. See the images of the Hartz® brochure at the link below. While the graphics show how far we’ve come in presenting products in the last 10 plus years, the messages are alarmingly similar. A Google search for the study referenced indicates its results have been referenced by as many as 20 or more … [Read more...]
JAVMA: attire may impact believability
Among the many papers in the August 1st issue of JAVMA are two that will interest many veterinary team members: Clients' attitudes toward veterinarians' attire in the small animal emergency medicine setting. Link. Survey of human-horse relationships and veterinary care for geriatric horses. Link. Source: JAVMA, August 1, 20-18. Link. INSIGHTS: It is interesting … [Read more...]
Walmart enters veterinary care market
Targeting pets that don’t see veterinarians, Walmart is entering the veterinary care market. Veterinary clinics are opening in Walmart stores. By April 5, the pet products company PetIQ had opened its first three Walmart-based clinics in the Oklahoma cities of Bartlesville, Duncan, and Edmond. Company officials plan to have opened 20 by the end of last June. It will then push … [Read more...]
Effect of refrigeration of clinical canine urine samples on quantitative bacterial culture
This study is meaningful to all veterinary teams. A group from Louisiana State University examined the effect of 24 hours of refrigeration on urine samples collected from dogs with signs of urinary tract infection (UTI). From a group of 104 dogs, bacterial growth was identified in 35.6 percent (n = 37), 33.7 percent (35), and 31.7 percent (33) of the immediately processed, … [Read more...]
Latest JAVMA
We’ve linked you to the table of contents for this issue of JAVMA. The following summary is from the JAVMA news segment: Veterinarians, caught in a chronic opioid shortage, are turning to other anesthetics that may be less effective. In other news, the social climate at veterinary colleges is improving overall, but among students, sexism, racism, and homophobia may be … [Read more...]
JAVMA’s latest issue
The June issue of JAVMA has something of interest for almost any animal health pro. We’ve shared three abstracts here: Clinic devises novel approach to employee’s child care conundrum, Link. Rabies exposures and pre-exposure vaccination practices among individuals with an increased risk of rabies exposure in the United States, Link. Quantification of vitamin D3 in … [Read more...]
JAVMA, May 15th Issue
Questions about prolonging an animal’s life, economics of a veterinary degree awareness about a veterinary career, summary of the Merck Animal Health Veterinary Wellbeing Study and features of horses treated for recurrent colic are some great items in this issue. Source: JAVMA, May 15, 2018. Link. INSIGHTS: Equine animal health pros will want to review the recurrent colic … [Read more...]
AABP program benefits recent graduates
The American Association of Bovine Practitioners hosted the first in a planned series of educational meetings designed for recent graduates. The AABP Recent Veterinary Graduate Conference was open to veterinarians who had graduated since 2010 and 165 attended. The conference provided continuing education on beef and dairy medicine; including obstetrics, necropsy, examinations, … [Read more...]
Latest Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
The April 15, 2018 issue of JAVMA has three papers that caught our eyes. We’ve linked to the abstracts below: Rabies surveillance in the United States during 2016 Outcomes of and risk factors for presumed canine H3N2 influenza virus infection in a metropolitan outbreak Case-control study to determine herd-level risk factors for bovine respiratory disease in nursing … [Read more...]
Telehealth, is reality
Telehealth, or telemedicine, is not a specific service. It is a collection of resources to enhance care and education delivery. The term, telemedicine is often used to refer to traditional clinical diagnosis and monitoring that is delivered by technology. However, the term, telehealth is now more commonly used. It better describes the wide range of diagnosis and management, … [Read more...]
November JAVMA. Diverse topics.
Whether it is dog breed bans, or using gabapentin to reduce stress and aggression in cats or the effect of brachycephaly and body condition score on respiratory thermoregulation of healthy dogs, animal health pros will find something of interest in this issue of JAVMA. Source: JAVMA, November, 2017. Link to table of contents only. … [Read more...]
November 2017 JAVMA
The recent hurricanes and related flooding displaced many pets. Multiple canine parvovirus outbreaks have been reported. We note the paper linked below in this issue of JAVMA. It is a timely retrospective case series and case-control study. Evaluation of mortality rate and predictors of outcome in dogs receiving outpatient treatment for parvoviral enteritis. Source: … [Read more...]
Prevent prescription errors
We all need to do the best we can to improve communication between human pharmacies and veterinarians. During a session this year at the AVMA Convention 2017, Jennifer Buur, DVM, and Maureen Schanck, PharmD, shared common challenges and ways to better communicate prescriptive information to match the pharmacists’ training or lack thereof. Source: JAVMA News, October 1, … [Read more...]
Journal of the AVMA
We linked you to the table of contents for this issue of the Journal. Two papers caught our team’s attention: Comparison of clinical findings between dogs with suspected anaphylaxis and dogs with confirmed sepsis Movement patterns of exhibition swine and associations of influenza A virus infection with swine management practices Source: Journal of the AVMA, … [Read more...]
AVMA takes a stand on assistance animals
The AVMA House of Delegates passed a policy on "The Veterinarian's Role in Supporting Appropriate Selection and Use of Service, Assistance and Therapy Animals." Therapy animals are not covered under the ADA, FH, or ACAA. Source: JAVMA News, September 15, 2017. The AVMA encourages veterinarians to be familiar with the legal status and protections accorded to service, … [Read more...]
August 15 JAVMA ready for study
From the news section: A fatal neurologic disease is raising the possibility of local extinctions of Western deer and elk herds. In other news, disagreements over information sharing, technology, and privacy have hindered progress on how to track horses on a wide scale, although microchipping advocates say this approach provides an ideal solution. Source: JAVMA, August … [Read more...]
What’s in the latest JAVMA
Here’s a quick look at the May 1, 2017 JAVMA. Our AHD team found the article titled Bovine colostral cells—the often forgotten component of colostrum interesting from the perspective of the DVM, the producer and sales representatives. Source: JAVMA, May 2017. Although the role of colostral antibodies in the protection of neonates against disease has been well documented, … [Read more...]
A short lesson on AVMA policy
Dr. Mark Helfat, chair of the AVMA board of directors, recently answered questions about what AVMA policies are, how they’re created and why they’re important. The association has 250 policies that span issues from animal welfare to food safety to antimicrobials to general practice. Source: JAVMA, April 12, 2017. AVMA policies exist in three primary categories and are … [Read more...]
Increase feline heartworm prevention efforts
At an estimated prevalence of 0.4%, hundreds of thousands of cats in the United States are likely infected with heartworms. Given the difficulty in diagnosing infection at all clinically relevant parasite stages and lack of curative treatment options, efforts should be increased to ensure all cats receive heartworm preventive. Source: JAVMA, April 15, 2017. Results: … [Read more...]
Review of hazards to female reproductive health in veterinary practice
A systemized review of publications that address female reproductive health hazards in veterinary practice, summarize best practices to mitigate reproductive risks and identify current knowledge gaps identifies a growing risk in veterinary practices. Reported hazards included exposure to anesthetic gases, radiation, antineoplastic drugs, reproductive hormones, physically … [Read more...]
The quirks of working with goats and sheep
Goats live on about 128,000 farms in the United States, according to the 2012 Census of Agriculture, with a population of about 2.6 million. Sheep are on fewer farms, 88,000 with a population of about 5.4 million. Veterinarians in small ruminant practices also tend to llamas, alpacas, deer, elk who live on thousands of farms. Source: JAVMA, April 2017. Veterinarians who … [Read more...]
Student-run free clinics provide more than care
Students from the University of Minnesota College of Veterinary Medicine are getting hands-on training while providing veterinary care to pets owned by people in underserved communities. Source: JAVMA, March 15, 2017. Also see: JAVMA, March 15, 2017. Table of Contents … [Read more...]
Cat-friendly practices tops 1,000
The American Association of Feline Practitioners indicated last year there are 1,050 cat-friendly practices and another 500 in the process of earning the designation. Understanding cat behavior, feline-friendly handling, and reducing stress associated with the visit are core components of the CFP program. The program encompasses the entire well-being of cats, cat caregivers and … [Read more...]