FDA Seeks More Input On Food Facility Preventative Control GuidelinesNovember 1, 2011 The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) reopened the public comment period for seeking guidance on establishing preventative controls for registered human food, animal food and animal feed facilities. In May 2011, the FDA sought comments on best practices for hazard analysis and preventative controls for facilities that manufacture, process, pack or hold food for human or animal consumption. The agency said it reopened the comment period “in response to a request for an extension to allow interested persons additional time to submit comments.” Information obtained from the comments will assist the FDA in the development of guidance on preventative controls for food facilities. The FDA is specifically seeking comments in the following general categories with respect to human food, animal food or animal feed, including pet food: • Conducting a hazard analysis to determine the hazards associated with specific human food, animal food, and animal feed and processes (e.g., the procedures used to determine potential hazards and to assess whether they are reasonably likely to occur); • Implementing process controls (e.g., processes employed to prevent, eliminate, or reduce to acceptable levels the occurrence of any hazards that are reasonably likely to occur); • Validating one …
SPONSORED CONTENTThe Reality of Veterinary Surgery ErgonomicsOne of the greatest challenges of Work-Related Musculo-Skeletal Disorders (WRMSD) is that they can come on slowly. They can be easy to ignore initially. The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) issued ergonomic guidelines to help veterinarians catch problems early. + Learn More
Judge Rules Against FDA In Bid To Close Franck’sOctober 31, 2011 Memories of the 2-year-old tragedy still echo through the U.S. veterinary, pharmacy and equestrian communities. For Paul Franck, the details certainly remain fresh. “I was taken aback initially,” Franck recalls of April 20, 2009, when he heard the news that 21 Venezuelan polo horses had died after receiving injections just before the U.S. Polo Championship in Wellington, Florida. “I was hoping it wasn’t our pharmacy, that we weren’t involved with the prescription.” Franck added that his compounding lab is “at a good point now.” Which means circumstances have changed quite a bit from those of April 2009. Nightmare Scenario A high-profile tragedy such as the polo horse deaths is a nightmare for any organization that fills prescriptions. But a company such as Franck’s has to be ready to deal with misfills, Franck said, because no matter how diligent your operation, they are going to happen. “In our industry, there are misfills on a weekly basis,” he said. “It’s how you divulge them—how you move forward and deal with the situation—that matters.” After the horses died, Franck’s immediately hired an outside source to investige. Results revealed that the prescription was incorrectly filled …
AVMA Says Vets Make Ideal Zombie Apocalypse Traveling CompanionsOctober 31, 2011 The American Veterinary Medical Association today released a statement to continue its mission of advancing the veterinary profession, even in the event of a zombie apocalypse. The AVMA listed the top five reasons why a veterinarian would be a useful team member in a zombie-dominated world, including: 1. Veterinarians have a better chance at surviving: In the event of a zombie apocalypse, survivors are at a premium, and losing members of your group will make you much more vulnerable. The biggest risk is getting bitten by a zombie. Well, who’s better at avoiding bites than a veterinarian? 2. They can provide medical care: Pre-apocalypse, see your physician. Post-apocalypse, if a physician isn’t available, you couldn’t do much better than having a veterinarian treat your (non-zombie-bite) wounds and illnesses. Veterinarians spend at least four years post-grad training to care for all species, so while the general anatomy might be slightly different, they’re probably not going to be overwhelmed by the prospect of working on human patients. 3. They can take care of the animals: With electrical grids down and gasoline no longer in production, you’re going to be relying on animals much more: Dogs for protection, horses …
Maximize Technicians’ Potential As Client CommunicatorsOctober 28, 2011 When technicians excel in the medical and communication components of their jobs, they can maximize revenue and encourage a more efficient practice. Consultants say, however, that many veterinarians aren’t delegating enough responsibility to technicians. Training is the biggest hurdle that keeps practitioners from using technicians fully, experts say, noting that members of a practice’s team should share responsibility for client communications. Technicians are often viewed by clients as easier to approach, perhaps less intimidating. “Years ago, veterinarians hired animal lovers and people haters and tried to make them technicians,” says Jim Guenther, DVM, MBA, MHA, CVPM, a consultant at Strategic Veterinary Consulting in Asheville, N.C. “Now with formal training for medical certification and client communication, technicians need to possess both skills to be effective. Technicians can be a practice’s biggest asset or handicap in regard to client loyalty and compliance.” Technicians need formal and in-house education before gaining access to clients, Dr. Guenther says. They also need to know veterinary expectations and restrictions regarding client interaction. Hire for Skills Efficiency in the practice starts with hiring, says Shannon Pignott, CVPM, ACC, owner and business director at 1-10 Pet Emergency and president of VetThink Inc., …
Revenue At VCA Antech's Existing Hospitals Edges Up In Q3October 27, 2011Revenue at VCA Antech's Existing Hospitals Edges Up in Q3Revenue at VCA Antech's Existing Hospitals Edges Up in Q3, Antech Q3 2011Same-store revenue at VCA Antech's animal hospitals grew by 1.0 percent for the third quarter of its 2011 fiscal year, compared to the year-ago period.Same-store revenue at VCA Antech's animal hospitals grew by 1.0 percent for the third quarter of its 2011 fiscal year, compared to the year-ago period.newslineRevenue at VCA Antech's Existing Hospitals Edges Up in Q3Posted: Oct. 27, 2011, 7:00 p.m. EDT Strong financial performances at VCA Antech Inc.'s network of hospitals led to increased third quarter earnings and revenues for the Los Angeles company. VCA Antech reported today a 9.5 percent increase in revenues and a 10.6 percent increase in gross profit at its hospitals. Gross margin for the hospitals increased to 17.0 percent from 16.8 percent in the year-ago period, and operating margin increased to 15.1 percent from 14.8 percent in the third quarter of 2010. Total revenue for the hospitals increased to $303.2 million, due in large part to VCA Antech's acquisition of four independent hospitals and BrightHeart Veterinary Centers and its nine animal hospitals. "Although we continue to face a challenging business environment, …
Head Halter, Medication For Fear AggressionOctober 27, 2011Using odd ratio statistics, one of our master’s degree students at Tufts Center for Animals and Public Policy found that dogs exhibiting fear aggression are 580 times more likely than a control group with owner-directed aggression to have been raised in what we call a suboptimal environment during the sensitive period of development (3-12 weeks of age). She defined a suboptimal environment as one in which the puppy is raised with little contact with people, perhaps isolated in a basement, whelping room, garage or outdoor compound. It is not hard to see that puppies raised without the benefit of ongoing benign interactions with a variety of people (and dogs other than littermates) might become somewhat insular in their thinking and therefore shy of novel encounters. This shyness can be compounded into frank fearfulness by negative experiences, such as being shouted at or handled roughly. Because men and children are more prone to behaviors that might intimidate a pup, they are the ones who typically become the subjects of a fear aggressive dog’s attention. The time course for development of fear aggression in dogs almost exactly mirrors that of the development of a similar type of dysfunctional aggression in humans (when …
Don’t Sit On A BackOctober 27, 2011 Jewel is a 10-year-old female Yorkipoo—a designer dog. She walked into her vet’s clinic on a Tuesday because of back pain. She was hospitalized that day. On Wednesday, she became paralyzed. On Thursday afternoon, she was referred for evaluation because she was losing deep pain. An MRI revealed a large disc hernia at T13-L1. Surgery was performed late that night. This is not a completely unusual case. Your local surgeon or neurologist could probably share many similar stories of delayed referral of a paralyzed patient. What can we learn from Jewel’s story? A Real Jewel The neurological exam revealed that she was indeed paraplegic, with normal reflexes and minimal deep pain in the hind legs. The goals of the MRI are to confirm the diagnosis (a disc hernia) and localize the lesion (T13-L1). In addition, the MRI determines the side of the hernia (left vs. right), which dictates the surgical approach. Surgery entailed a hemilaminectomy and fenestrations. A hemilaminectomy is a surgical procedure that consists of removing the lateral and dorsal part of the lamina of the vertebrae on either side of the disc space. This allows access to the spinal cord, and …
Natural Stress Busters For CatsOctober 27, 2011 Happy cats mean happy human caregivers. Stressed cats lead to unhappy humans; cats who become ill or maladjusted from stress may experience emotionally difficult and/or prematurely ended lives from disease or euthanasia. Many human stressors affect cats similarly. Incessant noise, hostility, food insecurity or poor quality and social isolation can all negatively affect well being. While human stressors such as workplace conflict, financial decline or natural disasters may be unavoidable and trickle down to cause cats further discomfort, several everyday feline sources of stress can respond to inexpensive, readily available coping strategies.1 Knowing how, when, and where stress takes its toll on the body allows concerned caregivers to design tailored interventions and eliminate environmental contributors to stress. Prolonged psychological stress causes illness as innate protective reflexes designed to remove us from danger become left in the “on” position. Chronically activated “fight or flight” responses delivered by sympathetic nervous system excitation disrupt physiologic equilibrium, i.e., homeostasis. Thus, the same metabolic processes that propel us to seek safe shelter in the face of an oncoming tornado also give us escort to the grave if urges to fight or flee never cease. Threatening situations incite glucose mobilization …
Practicing HolisticOctober 27, 2011 In the early ’90s, Judy Morgan, DVM, walked into a continuing education course about veterinary orthopedic manipulation and immediately thought she’d made a mistake. Many attendees were not veterinarians, but chiropractors. The opening lecture was about chiropractic adjustments. Dr. Morgan had signed up for the course because she had a colleague who did a lot of orthopedic surgery and she wanted to help with post-surgical rehabilitation. But as a traditional veterinarian, in conventional practice since 1984, she scoffed. This had to be quackery. She would have left, without even hearing him out, but another side of her practical nature won out. “I’d already paid for the course,” says Morgan, who owns Clayton Veterinary Associates in Clayton, N.J. “So I stayed.” What she thought was a mistake turned out to be career-changing. When Morgan got home, she decided to try out the technique. Her mother’s standard schnauzer had so much pain, she could no longer climb into the car. With her mother’s blessing, she tried an adjustment and then led the dog into the garage. “Not only did the dog jump into the car, but then she started jumping from the front to the back, …
Mars Launches DNA Test To Increase Genetic Diversity In Breeding Dog LittersOctober 24, 2011 Mars Veterinary of Rockville, Md., introduced a DNA test designed to help dog breeders diversify genetic makeup, reduce problems associated with inbreeding and maintain desirable traits in puppies. The Optimal Selection test analyzes and compares chromosomes of blood samples from potential breeding pairs. The system scores potential pairs based on the compatibility of the chromosomes analyzed. A lower score indicates less risk of haplotype overlap in undesirable areas between potential pairs, allowing breeders to maximize the potential genetic heterozygosity from the selected dogs. According to Mars, studies have shown limited heterozygosity can cause decreased litter size and lead to greater health risks in puppies. “We have leveraged our extensive knowledge of the genetic structures across breeds to closely examine the DNA of dogs within each breed and help owners take their breeding programs to the next level,” said Angela Hughes, DVM, Ph.D., veterinary genetics research manager for Mars Veterinary. “Optimal Selection has the potential to transform dog breeding so that the genetic diversity within a breed or family line can be protected and maximized, which can make a tangible, long-term positive impact on the health and wellness of these wonderful dogs.” Optimal Selection are available through …