Sunday, August 23, 2009
Animal Welfare and Adoption Groups
Best Friends Animal Sanctuary in Angel Canyon, Utah, is the nation's largest sanctuary for abandoned and abused dogs, cats, horses, and other animals. Animals come to the 3,000-acre sanctuary from all over the country and each day there are at least 1,800 animals at the facility. Best Friends seeks to place adoptable animals in loving homes. Those who are sick, very old, or who have suffered extreme trauma are kept at the sanctuary for the rest of their lives.
Best Friends was begun in Arizona in the 1970s by a group of animal lovers who rescued animals from shelters, rehabilitated them, and attempted to find homes for them. The number of unadoptable animals grew and eventually a permanent home was needed for the organization. The sanctuary was established in Angel Canyon in the early 1980s.
Hearts United for Animals in Auburn, Nebraska, is a no-kill shelter and animal welfare organization located on two farms with a total of 105 acres. There are approximately 250 dogs at the farms at any one time. They also rescue cats, but their numbers are small. Dogs who cannot be adopted stay at the shelter for the rest of their lives. The largest of the two shelter facilities is located on a 65-acre tree farm and features specialty housing that includes soft beds, covered patios, and dog play houses for dogs up for adoption. On the grounds of the shelter is a spay/neuter clinic, grooming salon, memorial park, and an agility field.
North Shore Animal League America in Port Washington, New York, began its legacy of helping unwanted animals working out of a garage in 1944. Since then, the organization has become one of the largest pet adoption agencies in the world. Animals are rescued from shelters and overcrowded animal organizations throughout the country and brought to North Shore's no-kill adoption center, which houses approximately 350 dogs, puppies, cats, and kittens. Trained counselors work with adopters to ensure that animals are placed in good homes. In addition to rescue and adoption efforts, North Shore also has humane education and public outreach programs.
Doggie Fun Facts - Balto the Wonder Dog
Balto became famous throughout the U.S., but after a while, he and other dogs in the team became a traveling sideshow attraction. When a Cleveland businessman discovered the dogs were not being treated well, he bought the dogs and brought them back to Cleveland, where they lived out their lives comfortably. Balto's remains are on display at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History. A statue in his honor was erected in New York City's Central Park, where it still stands today.
Doggie of the Day: Basset Bleu de Gascogne
Country of Origin: France
History: The basset bleu de Gascogne is descended from ancient scenthounds. It was developed from the grand bleu de Gascogne and the basset Saintongeois in the late nineteenth century.
Physical Description: This is a medium-size, strong, sturdy dog that is longer than it is tall. It has a narrow, wedge-shaped head with a domed skull and long muzzle. The nose is large and black and the eyes are dark brown with loose lower lids. It has very long, low-set ears that are of fine leather and fold, or curl, alongside the face. There is a deep chest, strong legs, and a long tail. The feet are large. The short coat is white with black ticking, giving a blue effect, and black patches.
Height: 12 to 15 inches
Weight: No standard available
Temperament: The basset bleu is an easy-going friendly dog. It gets along with almost everyone, including other dogs.
Activity Level: Moderate
Best Owner: This breed does well with an active owner in a rural or suburban home.
Special Needs: Fenced yard, leashed
Possible Health Concerns: None known
Friday, August 14, 2009
Dogs Alert Man to Choking Neighbor
Posted on: Friday, 14 August 2009, 08:59 CDT
An elderly Canadian woman in Nova Scotia says she owes her life to her neighbor's dogs who alerted their owner she was choking on her backyard deck.
Gert Mombourquette, 76, told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. she was alone late Saturday night eating some homemade chocolate squares when she choked and couldn't breathe or make a sound.
Her neighbor Kevin Murphy, a sergeant with the Halifax Regional Police, was using his break to return home to walk his two dogs as the woman was choking.
The dogs, Jenny and Mandy, resisted going for a walk and were barking and whining, so Murphy checked Mombourquette's door, found it open and walked in, the report said.
He opened the door and Jenny ... she was going around in circles and licking my legs,
the woman said. She knew I was in trouble. They sense it, they really do.
Murphy successfully performed the Heimlich maneuver and called paramedics.
Mombourquette told the CBC she'll still make chocolate squares for Murphy and his dogs, but will give up eating them.
Sunday, August 9, 2009
Rachael Ray Plans Mutt Madness Pet Charity Contest
LOS ANGELES -- Rachael Ray is looking for 64 charities to compete in a $200,000 contest to find the most deserving pet cause in the country.
Using basketball's March Madness format, Mutt Madness will start with 64 contestants, Ray said. These will be whittled down by Ray and a panel of pet lovers from entries submitted through www.rachaelray.com/muttmadness by Sept. 30.
Each of the top 64 groups gets $1,000. Winners of the next several rounds, chosen by online votes, will get another $1,000. The final voting showdown is worth $25,000 for second place and $50,000 for the winner. The champ will be announced in early December, Ray said.
Ray, an Emmy-award winning talk show host and the mastermind of Food Network's "30 Minute Meals," joined forces last year with the Ainsworth Pet Nutrition company to develop a line of dog food and treats called Rachael Ray Nutrish.
Everything she gets from the sale of dog food goes to Rachael's Rescue (www.rachaelsrescue.org), an organization dedicated to helping at-risk animals through adoption, medical care, education, training and outreach initiatives.
The rescue raised $400,000 last year, but Ray wanted to help more people and animals. "We thought Mutt Madness would be a fun and fair way to spread the love and the money," she said by telephone.
Ray's first dog, a pit bull named Boo, was her inspiration for the rescue and the contest, she said. "She changed my life in every good way possible."
Boo died a few years ago, but Ray said she had plenty of love left for Isaboo, who appears with her in Nutrish commercials.
Pet Hospice Care Helps Pet Owners Cope With Death
"I knew Blake, my dog, was old enough that I didn't want to go through any heroic measures to try to keep him alive. I wasn't going to consider chemotherapy. Dr. Villalobos explained that we could keep him as pain free as possible until the end," Brennan explains.
"He passed very peacefully thanks to Alice being there with me," she continues. "He died literally in my arms. I had moved an old couch outside for him, so he could sleep on it. One night he came in and was looking at me in a strange way. I laid down with him, and his breathing was very labored so I called Alice. It was his end."
Hospice care -- physical and physiological care for the wellbeing of the terminally ill -- has a long history in the United States. But hospice care for animals is a very new concept. Villalobos treated Blake's end-of-life discomfort with pain medications and homeopathic medicines.
Veterinary hospice is a philosophy that is really in its infancy. In 2000, the movement gained national attention at the annual convention of the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) where Villalobos spoke on hospice care. The first international symposium wasn't held until March of 2008 at the University of California-Davis, and the International Association for Animal Hospice and Palliative Care (IAAHPC) is currently being established.
Dr. Amir Shana, owner of the Compassionate Care Veterinary Clinic in Chicago, has been offering hospice care to animals for well over a decade. Shana provides house calls for patients who are too sick to make it into his office and also runs a hospice facility, where animals can be boarded. About half of his practice is in pet hospice services.
"Hospice is a philosophy of care, it is also a program of care and in certain cases it is an actual place where patients are being cared for," Dr. Shana explains.
For Villalobos, the new movement really recognizes something that has been happening for many decades. "Veterinarians have always offered care to animals at the end of life," explains Villalobos. "Until now, it has not been a recognized philosophy, and it hasn't had a name."
Villalobos says that one of the most important aspects of this new movement is that it's seen as a philosophy that is accessible to all veterinarians so they can better serve their patients. And it doesn't require that pet owners give up hope, she adds. Pet hospice care can be incorporated with measures taken to attempt to save the pet's life. It means simply that the animal's needs are taken care of with pain control and other efforts to reduce suffering.
Villalobos says that one of the biggest hurdles in veterinary hospice care is dealing with the shock that owners feel when discovering that their pet has a condition that may precipitate end-of-life care.
"A decade goes by and it is quick for us, but it is the lifespan of a pet. It' takes a lot of compassion to help people to understand it. It sneaks up on them. We have people who are in shock that their four-footed, beloved companion is now geriatric," Villalobos says. "The philosophy of hospice is letting the pet owner know the pet is dying."
The second international symposium on pet hospice will be held over Labor Day weekend on the campus of University of California-Davis. This new group, which recognizes veterinarians, veterinary technicians, social workers, psychologists, ethicists and clergy, has a great deal of work to do setting standards for this new field. For example, members will begin establishing protocols and guidelines for pain control, the place of euthanasia, and quality of life. The field is so new that attendees will even be charged with the task of defining pet hospice care. Visit www.avma.org for more information.
Courtesy of ARAcontent
Pet Trusts Offer Animal Lovers Peach of Mind
"My parents have passed away, and I don't have a lot of family, so we wanted to make sure Lulu Bell was taken care of no matter what happened," explained Jerry. "It actually relieved a lot of stress. At least we know we have set aside a little bit of money, some instructions and there is a person willing to take care of her."
Many pet owners assume that they will outlive their beloved pets, but that isn't always the case. Unfortunately, when animals get left behind, they sometimes wind up in a local humane society where they could be euthanized. A pet trust ensures the animal will continue to receive care and housing even after the death of the pet's human companion.
The Wilkerson's pet trust includes about $2,000, simple instructions for care, and entrusts the animal to a cousin who already loves Lulu. The money is primarily to help cover any large expenses that Lulu might incur, like veterinary bills, after the Wilkerson's deaths.
"It's interesting to note that very few states allowed pet trusts until 1990. Since then the concept has really taken off, and now more than 42 states allow pet trusts, including three states that passed legislation in 2009. I wouldn't be surprised if they were allowed in all 50 states ultimately," says Adrian Hochstadt, assistant director of State Legislative and Regulatory Affairs at the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA).
"Today, pet trusts are still relatively unusual in practice - most people choose to will a pet to a trusted family member," he says. "Pet trusts are one of the fastest growing segments of animal law today."
Pet trusts can vary according to a person's needs, and most pet trust laws allow people to will a certain amount of money toward the care of their pet after they are gone.
Missouri was one of the first states to have pet trusts. Gregory Dennis, an attorney in Missouri, says that the state has allowed pet trusts in some form since 1973.
Dennis advises that veterinarians should be made aware of trusts when they treat an animal. If a pet is covered by a trust, it's the trust that will likely be paying the bill and the trust also may stipulate what kind of veterinary care the animal should receive.
Dennis also notes that bequests that haven't been carefully drafted and, for example, leave exorbitant sums of money to a dog or cat, could be subject to legal challenges. People may argue that excessively large trusts are a sign a person was not mentally competent at the time the trust was drafted.
"Many state's pet trust laws include provisions that allows the courts to reduce a pet trust to a reasonable amount if it's excessive," says Linscott R. Hansen, an Illinois attorney who helped draft the Illinois pet trust law, which passed in 2004. "I advise people interested in setting up a pet trust to put into a trust just what the pet needs, and that's enough."
Hanson explains that pet trust acts allow people to create a trustee to oversee funds and another to care for the animal, which is a good way to help ensure the proper care of the animal. Dennis adds it may be a good idea to include a clause requiring two veterinarians to separately determine when a pet covered by a trust should be euthanized, and perhaps leave any remaining funds in a trust to a charity after the pet's death.
Michael Cathey, head of the American Veterinary Medical Foundation (AVMF), said that his charitable organization does receive bequests from animal lovers who want a part of their estate to go toward protecting and treating pets. The AVMF funds disaster response efforts for pets, veterinary scholarships and animal health studies, and donors can and do bequest their donations to specific programs. For example, if a dog owner lost a dog to cancer, they may elect to bequest some money to the AVMF to go toward animal health studies, Cathey explains.
"A donor's wishes are always honored as long as those wishes fit in well with one of our programs," Cathey says. "If we accept a gift, we will put that money toward whatever program the donor has requested. We're really trying to help people understand that this option is available to them."
Courtesy of ARAcontent
Friday, August 7, 2009
Eclampsia in Dogs
By: Brenda Alexander
August 7, 2009
Please pass this information along to anyone with an unspayed female dog. I fancy myself very knowledgeable about dogs but I had never heard of this before and it almost cost my beautiful, sweet Dakotah her life. Do NOT let this happen to you and your beloved friend.
Miracle Number 1:
I woke up at approximately 3:15 a.m. on Tuesday morning very thirsty. I was tired and didn't feel like going downstairs for a drink. I sat there for a minute or two trying to make up my mind. By then I was already awake and figured why not.
Miracle Number 2:
My sweet Kota was lying in the hall where she could NOT be missed. Her legs were stretched out in front, muscles rigid and she was hyperventilating. She was panting extremely hard and was moving her mouth funny. I had fed her some turkey earlier that night and because of how she was working her mouth, I thought she might have accidentally ingested a bone and it was obstructing her breathing. So stupid me (or not so stupid, I don't know which) repeatedly put my fingers down her throat searching for an obstruction. I had never heard of eclampsia in dogs and she was fine an hour before that so I just assumed.
My husband works 3rd shift and we only have the one car. He was at work. I called him asking him to come home but he could not leave. I was frantic because is one minute's time (and that is NOT an exaggeration) she went into grand mal seizures. Naturally, I got bit pretty severely and I imagine that she thought her mommy was trying to kill her. She's being a little standoffish to me too but she's alive and that's all I care about.
Miracle Number 3
Normally, because my brother-in-law has severe sleep disorders, she unplugs her phone at night because they go to bed around 8:00 at night because they have to get up at 5:00 (or earlier). In desperation, I called her and like I said, miracle number 3, not only was the phone ON the hook but they were awake. Pam and Jim (my sister and brother-in-law) live about 20 minutes away on a good traffic day but Jim made it to my house in less than 10. We jumped in the car and headed to the emergency vet clinic and I told them she was choking. They said, "no, she has hypocalcemia." I had no idea what that was and still thought she was choking and that she'd die from their misdiagnosis.
About 45 minutes later, the vet comes out and says that Kota's calcium level was so low that it was incompatible with life. Her fever was 107, having grand mal seizures and would most likely die from DIC (deciminated intravascular coagulation) which means her blood was clotting and sending those to her major organs. They fully expected this to happen and asked if we wanted it done. She went on to say that if this happened, the chances of any kind of meaningful recovery was low and it might not be in our financial best interest to pursue it, especially even with treatment, the chances of recovery were small.
Miracle Number 4
Jim whipped out his credit card and said Kota dying was not an option...period. Do whatever it takes so that we pick up a living, breathing, healthy dog. Some people might say, it's just a dog. Why go to that expense. No one reading this will say that. Love is love. No matter what form it takes, when you love something or someone and you lose that, it's heartbreaking. I have never had "just a dog." I never will either. My dogs are a huge part of my family and both Pam and Jim feel the same way. Their generosity still blows me away. How can I thank them for saving my baby? It's not possible. I'm baking them muffins today! Or tomorrow but they're getting them.
I came home and if you think it's bad and hard to sit by the phone waiting for a call, try sitting by the phone praying that it doesn't ring. That's worse! I kept thinking it would ring and I couldn't sleep because for some stupid reason I thought as long as I stayed awake, willing her to live, that she wouldn't die. That somehow my love for her would transcend space and time and give her the courage and strength to fight back. Who am I to say this is not so? My beautiful baby is running around downstairs with her boyfriend (my husband, lol) and love can do miraculous things. So can prayer. God had His hand in this. Of that I have no doubts whatsoever.
Miracle Number 5
I have a beautiful, loving (albeit a little mad at me right now) min pin that I get to enjoy for a long, long time thanks to God, Pam and Jim and to the power of love! I am having her spayed as I will never put her through this again. Also, for the record, she never looked pregnant. We did not even suspect she was going to have babies until the week before she had them. She carried them well. I won't ever make that mistake again.
For more information on this condition and how to hopefully prevent it, please google eclampsia in dogs. Become aware of it so that this does not happen to you and your beloved.