Pet-Related Falls Injure More Than 86,000 AnnuallyApril 17, 2009 Nearly 30 out of every 100,000 Americans are treated annually in a medical emergency facility for injuries sustained during falls caused by cats or dogs, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study slated for release on March 27. The study provides the first national estimates of fall injuries associated with cats and dogs, which account for about 1 percent of the nation’s 8 million fall-related injuries treated by emergency departments each year. Overall, the CDC estimated 86,629 fall injuries each year were associated with cats and dogs, with dogs causing nearly 88 percent of the injuries. This estimate is likely underestimated because it did not include injuries that were not treated at all or were treated at home, physician offices, or non-emergency outpatient facilities. Women were more than twice as likely as men to seek medical attention at an emergency department due to a pet-related fall, the government said. The most common primary injury diagnosis was fracture (30.7 percent), followed by contusions/abrasions (26.2 percent), strain/sprain (18.8 percent) laceration (12.8 percent) and internal injury (4.2 percent). Although injuries were most frequent among people under 14 years or between 35 and 54 …
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Chenango Valley Expands Dry Pet Food RecallApril 17, 2009 The possibility of cross-contamination is feared. Chenango Valley Pet Foods, which previously recalled dry pet foods that were manufactured with a shipment of rice protein concentrate, is now expanding its voluntary recall to include other pet foods. The newly-recalled products don’t contain rice protein concentrate, but were manufactured during periods when rice protein concentrate formulas were processed. The recall of the products is precautionary due to the possibility of cross-contamination, Chenango Valley says. The dry pet foods being recalled are: • DOCTORS FOSTER & SMITH LAMB & BROWN RICE FORMULA ADULT DOG FOOD, NET WT. 6 LBS. (UPC 25141 28244), 15 LBS. (25141 30074), and 30 LBS. (UPC 25141 06043); Date Codes: Best By Feb 09 09 and Best By Feb 26 09; • SHOP RITE REDI-MIXT DOG FOOD FOR DOGS, NET WT. 25 LB. (UPC 41190 00555), Date Code: Code C7107; • LICK YOUR CHOPS KITTEN & CAT FOOD, NET WEIGHT 4 LBS. (UPC 32976 25915), and 18 LBS. (UPC 32976 25925); Date Code: Best Used By April 29 08; • SHEP chunk style dog food, NET WT. 20 LBS. (UPC 41498 14142); Date Code: Best By March 14 08; • 8 in 1 Ferret …
Hill’s Pet Nutrition Recalls Cat FoodApril 17, 2009 Prescription Diet dry food may contain bad wheat gluten. Hill’s Pet Nutrition, Inc. has announced that it is voluntarily recalling its Prescription Diet m/d Feline dry food from the market due to possible contamination. Hill’s is taking this precautionary action, it says, because during a two-month period in early 2007, wheat gluten for the product was provided by a company that also supplied wheat gluten to Menu Foods, the manufacturer now recalling dozens of pet foods. U.S. Food and Drug Administration tests of wheat gluten samples from this period show the presence of a small amount of melamine, a substance used in fertilizer, as well as in floor tiles, kitchenware and other household products. Prescription Diet m/d Feline Dry, which represents less than one half of one percent of all Hill’s products, is the only product Hill’s currently sells in the United States that contains wheat gluten from any supplier and no other Hill’s Prescription Diet or Science Diet products are affected by this voluntary recall, according to the company. Previously, Hill’s Science Diet Savory Cuts Feline canned cat foods, manufactured by Menu Foods, were withdrawn from the market as a precaution. Together with …
AVMA Urges Greater Vet Oversight In Meat ProductionApril 17, 2009 Responding to a Department of Agriculture report, the American Veterinary Medical Assn. on Dec. 12 called for increased veterinary oversight of preslaughter activities at U.S. meat plants. The USDA Office of the Inspector General report followed an investigation of the Hallmark/Westland beef recall this year. Investigators examined the history of Food Safety and Inspection Service inspections at Hallmark/Westland and at 10 other facilities, which slaughter older dairy or beef cows removed from the herd for various reasons, usually because of decreased production. The report indicated, among other things, too few veterinarians in inspection positions. “This report proves that personnel from the front-line supervisor to the public health veterinarian were overtasked and they could not keep up with all of the inspection procedures they were charged with carrying out,” said Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee. “The public health veterinarian at the Hallmark/Westland plant was by himself, where before, there were two veterinarians assigned to the plant. “If the Food Safety and Inspection Service does not assign a sufficient number of inspectors, supervisors and veterinarians and provide the training they require, we take a gamble with food safety and …
UF Gets Grant To Expand Shelter Medicine ProgramApril 17, 2009 The University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine recently received a three year, $1.7 million grant from Maddie’s Fund to expand its shelter medicine program. Maddie’s Shelter Medicine Program is geared to enhance support for local animal rescue operations, improve disease control and adoption rates among shelter animals and expand professional training. “This is a transitional time for the animal welfare field as growing demand for animal-friendly solutions is challenging traditional sheltering paradigms,” said Julie Levy, DVM, Ph.D., who will become the Maddie’s professor of shelter medicine at the college and was a co-investigator on the grant. “There is an international desire to shift from a reactive animal-control model in which massive numbers of animals are processed through shelters with an overall high euthanasia rate to one in which proactive preventive measures reduce shelter admissions with individualized programs tailored to different types of animals to result in higher save rates.” Cynda Crawford, DVM, Ph.D., a co-discoverer of the canine influenza virus, will be the Maddie’s clinical assistant professor of shelter medicine. She will work with Dr. Levy and Natalie Isaza, DVM, to implement additional clinical and educational programs. …
International Equine Conference On Laminitis ScheduledApril 17, 2009 The Fourth International Equine Conference on Laminitis and Disease of the Foot will be held Nov. 2-4 in West Palm Beach, Fla. Michael Matz, who was the trainer of 2006 Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro, will be the featured speaker. Barbaro’s owners, Roy and Gretchen Jackson, will be honored at the event, as well as John and Marianne Castle, the driving force behind the conference. The Castles granted the seed money for the First Laminitis Conference in 2001 in memory of their Appaloosa named Spot that became afflicted with laminitis. In addition to the Castles, sponsors include Merial, of Duluth, Ga.; Thoroughbred Charities of America; and Purina Mills, of St. Louis. The conference is a joint effort of the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary medicine, The Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine and the University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine. To register, visit www.laminitisconference.com. <HOME>
License Fees On Agenda For Colorado HearingApril 17, 2009 During its meeting March 11, the Colorado Department of Agriculture will field comments from the public on its proposal to modify a state law that regulates pet facilities. The changes would affect some veterinarians, pet stores, animal wholesalers, grooming and boarding facilities, animal breeders and animal shelters. The meeting will begin at 9:30 a.m. in Lakewood, Colo., at 700 Kipling St., Ste. 4000 in the Inspection & Consumer Services Division of the Dept. of Agriculture. The proposal would amend the Pet Animal Care and Facilities Act to require pet “facilities” to apply annually for a license for each of its services that falls under a separate category. For example, if a pet store sells dogs and cats, breeds parrots to stock for sale, offers grooming and pet boarding and some dog obedience classes, it might need to apply for up to a five licenses, all with separate fees. Stores that strictly sell fish or other aquatic pets - not including reptiles or amphibians - could apply for an aquarium-only license for about $55 cheaper than the general “Pet Retail/Wholesale.” The Dept. of Agriculture says the fees are necessary to cover costs related to policing …
ASPCA’s Graffiti Ads Target Inner-City Pet OwnersApril 17, 2009 The new graffiti ad campaign recently unveiled by the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals aims to raise awareness about the organization’s mobile spay/neuter clinics. The urban street art reaches out to inner-city pet owners in New York City with a message about the benefits of spaying and neutering. The ads are meant to help foster positive attitudes toward pet sterilization, specifically among the target demographic, according to the ASPCA. Three artists -- Darren Brass of Miami, Fla.; Mike G of Ottawa, Canada; and KaNo of New York City -- created murals for display on phone kiosks and wallscapes throughout the Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn and Manhattan. The ads also appear in local newspapers throughout New York City. In one of the pieces featured in the 10-week campaign, the message reads, “What’s good for your dog is good for NYC.” In 2008, more than 24,000 cats and dogs were spayed and neutered in the ASPCA’s mobile clinics. Ed Sayres, ASPCA president and CEO, said the message “packs a powerful punch in the fight against pet overpopulation.” <HOME>
Colorado State Recruits Arthritic Dogs For Clinical StudyApril 17, 2009 Colorado State University is enrolling 36 dogs for a clinical study on the effects of an herbal supplement on pain and lameness associated with arthritis. The randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study will also investigate complications associated with herbal supplements. “Dogs in pain often receive anti-inflammatory medication as a treatment,” said Narda Robinson, DVM, director of the university’s Center for Comparative and Integrative Pain Medicine. “There are concerns about the long-term side effects of these drugs such as gastric ulcers, bleeding, abdominal pain and kidney or liver damage. Although many herbal manufacturers make claims that their product addresses pain without negative side effects, research supporting these claims—especially regarding how that research pertains to pets—is sparse.” The university is interested in enrolling dogs who, although lame, have not yet received any pain medications for their lameness. Dogs are eligible if they 1) have clinical evidence of lameness in one or more limbs, 2) have radiographic evidence of osteoarthritis in one or more joints in that limb and 3) bear significantly less weight on the affected limb, compared to the contralateral limb, as determined by force plate evaluation. Dogs enrolled in the study will be seen at the …
Tennessee Suspends Veterinarian’s LicenseApril 17, 2009 The Tennessee Board of Veterinary Medical Examiners has suspended a veterinarian’s medical license after viewing a secretly recorded video that showed him inhumanely restraining and euthanizing animals at a county shelter. The board deemed William Baber, DVM, an “eminent threat to public safety” and will not allow him to practice pending the results of an additional hearing, at which his license to practice may be revoked. Dr. Baber has a private practice in Gallatin, Tenn., and a contract with Sumner County Animal Control to perform euthanasias. The board said it suspended Baber's license for: Engaging in gross malpractice or a pattern of continued or repeated malpractice, ignorance, negligence or incompetence in the course of practicing veterinary medicine; . Unprofessional or unethical conduct or engaging in practices in connection with the practice of veterinary medicine that are in violation of the standards of professional conduct; . Conduct reflecting unfavorably upon the profession of veterinary medicine; . Professional incompetence; . Leaving non-livestock animals unattended during euthanasia procedures and before death occurs, and not confirming death before the body is disposed of. Baber had …