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Course Overview

There are many barriers to veterinary care, and cost is one of the most prevalent. As pet advocates and educators, you know that financial barriers cause stress for vets, pet parents, and pets themselves.

In this short course presented by Trupanion, we will discuss cost of care, the stop-treatment threshold, and how quality pet medical insurance, such as Trupanion, helps to lessen this burden, thereby alleviating fear, anxiety, and stress.

This course contains three lessons:

  • Lesson 1: Introduction to barriers to care
  • Lesson 2: The veterinary professional’s role in cost of care education and impact on the industry
  • Lesson 3: Quality medical insurance for pets: A solution

This course has been approved for .5 hours of RACE non-medical CE.

Presented by Trupanion

By Jennifer Merlo, DVM, CVBMC, Fear Free Director of Veterinary AffairsWe mention heartworm prevention to pet parents during almost every veterinary visit. So how is it that more than 1 million pets in the United States have heartworm disease1? American Heartworm Society (AHS) study data collected in 2022 shows that rates of heartworm disease continue to trend upward in both recognized “hot spots” and in locations where heartworm disease was once rare.2

Due to the increased incidence of travel and remote work career options, the United States is experiencing spread of heartworm prevalence throughout the country. Despite our best intentions, our pet parents are still unclear on the severity of the disease and the importance of maintaining proper heartworm prevention.

Here are five ways to help increase your client compliance and decrease the incidence of heartworm disease in your area:

  1. Discuss heartworm prevention at every visit for every pet.

Veterinarians and veterinary staff recognize the importance of discussing heartworm prevention at puppy appointments. However, often we forego discussing it during adult and senior canine patient visits. The AHS reports that only 37 percent of the U. S. canine population is on heartworm prevention!3 This is a staggering number, and it is our job to educate our clients on the importance of prevention for every pet, year-round. We must make it a point to have this discussion with them at every visit and reinforce the importance of prevention rather than treatment.

  1. Cats get heartworms, too!

Too often we neglect to have this important conversation with our feline pet parents. Fewer than 5 percent of cats are on heartworm prevention3. Most feline pet parents do not think about their cat being at risk, since most of them are indoor-only pets. It is important to have open discussions with cat owners about the spread of heartworms. Educating them that even “indoor” cats are still at risk for mosquito bites and heartworm disease can help reduce the incidence within our feline population. Pet owners may not be aware that there are multiple options for adequate heartworm prevention in cats that do not include giving an oral medication; something we know that causes lower compliance rates in cat owners.

  1. Heartworms travel and so do our pets.

The last few years have seen an increase in the number of remote workers, as well positions that require travel across state lines. Our pet owner population now looks at their dog companions as part of the family who often travel with them. As veterinary professionals, we can no longer rely on heartworm incidence maps as they relate to our direct location since our patients are traveling on a regular basis. Heartworm disease has now been diagnosed in all 50 states and without proper education our pet parents may not be aware that they are unintentionally putting their pets at risk. Be sure to ask questions about travel, including vacations as well as work travel, and be sure that pet owners understand that all pets, in all states, are at risk for contracting heartworms.

  1. Ensure that pet parents are regularly giving heartworm prevention.

When I was in practice, I was always in awe of the fact that most pet owners had an ample supply of heartworm prevention at home, yet our records indicated they should need to buy more. This is often because most pet owners only give their pet’s heartworm prevention one-third of the time. With the numerous options available on the market today, there is an option available for every pet parent to become compliant with their pet’s prevention routine. Discuss different prevention options and gauge what your client feels they can be most consistent with. By opening the conversation and talking through what works best for them, you increase your veterinary-client bond while simultaneously reinforcing the human-animal bond.

  1. Recommend heartworm testing annually.

 Despite everyone’s best intentions, sometimes doses of prevention get missed, and it’s our job to help our pet parents provide the best medical care for their pets. Recommend yearly heartworm testing to ensure that their pet is free of heartworm disease. Make obtaining the blood sample a Fear Free experience by using a Considerate Approach through positive rewards such as delicious treats or petting and using small-gauge needles to minimize discomfort. My staff was great at using insulin syringes to obtain the minimal amount of blood necessary to perform this annual test while the pet parent offered the patient treats. Most of our patients did not even realize venipuncture had occurred! Remind owners that unless we test, we won’t know, and that it’s just as important to monitor for heartworms as it is to prevent them.

It only takes one bite from an infected mosquito to transfer heartworms to a cat or dog. Let’s join with our pet parents to ensure that all our canine and feline patients are well protected.

Resources

  1. American Heartworm Society, 2023; https://www.heartwormsociety.org/
  2. American Heartworm Society Incidence Map, April 11, 2023
  3. The Truth About Cats and Dogs, American Heartworm Society

This article was reviewed/edited by board-certified veterinary behaviorist Dr. Kenneth Martin and/or veterinary technician specialist in behavior Debbie Martin, LVT.

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Empowered: Veterinary nursing for today and tomorrow

Veterinary technicians are more important now than ever before. In this webinar, join Angela Logsdon-Hoover, LVT RVT CVT ABCDT CCFP and learn how to continually grow in your career as a veterinary technician while making a big impact in the field of veterinary medicine.

By Kim Campbell ThorntonWhen clients think about vaccinations for their pets, they often associate them with their own feelings about needle-sticks. And most people don’t have positive associations with vaccinations or blood draws. As a veterinary professional, though, you know that vaccinations are essential to your patients’ good health. The conversation you have with clients can not only address the importance of protecting dogs and cats against disease, but also explain why vaccinations don’t have to be the painful experience that they think it will be for their pets.

Here are four conversation starters to help clients see the benefits of vaccinations, not only for their pets’ good health, but also how vaccinations can contribute to a positive and Fear Free experience in the clinic.

The risk of contagious diseases hasn’t gone away.

Canine parvovirus, canine distemper, and infectious canine hepatitis are highly contagious and frequently life-threatening.1 In cats, herpesvirus, calicivirus, panleukopenia, chlamydia, and feline leukemia are all widely distributed diseases that cause significant morbidity and mortality.2 Rabies is fatal in both species. Young animals are at highest risk, but any unvaccinated pet can acquire them. All of these diseases are preventable with vaccinations, and multiple combination vaccines are available for any protocol.

Combinations Are Key to Comfort

To prevent anxiety, reduce stress, and keep visits Fear Free for patients and clients, you can offer combination vaccines that contain only half the volume of most vaccines. That means not only fewer needle sticks but also shorter duration of the injection. For clients who are familiar with Fear Free techniques, those things are important.

Disease risks are changing.

Bacterial diseases such as Lyme disease and leptospirosis are increasingly seen in urban and suburban dogs and in areas where the infections were previously not considered to be a problem specific to leptospirosis.3 The Companion Animal Parasite Council reports that tick-borne diseases4 such as Lyme are spreading across much of the United States, in particular to the South and West, carried by deer, rodents, and migratory birds. A warmer climate, contributing to longer periods for tick reproduction, is also a factor. Adult ticks are active year-round any time the temperature is above freezing.

Climate change and increasing human and domestic animal contact with carrier wildlife have contributed as well to a greater incidence of leptospirosis. Dogs who previously were considered to be at low risk for these diseases, in particular city dogs and dogs weighing 15 pounds or less, are now the ones more likely to be exposed to them.

Lyme disease is spreading rapidly, and leptospirosis is now found in most areas.5 A combination Lyme and lepto vaccine provides protection with a single injection and less vaccine volume.

In addition to vaccinations, be sure to provide client education about vector control and exposure risk reduction through topical or systemic insecticides.

Clients with indoor cats may believe their pets don’t need vaccination for feline leukemia virus, but a single unsupervised escape outdoors can lead to exposure to the disease. All kittens should receive vaccination(s) for FeLV, followed by a booster when they are one year old.6 They can receive a lower volume 1/2mL FVRCP-FeLV combination for a more comfortable vaccination experience.

Vaccinating cats against FeLV has contributed to a decrease in the prevalence of the disease. Test for FeLV prior to vaccination so that cats who test positive aren’t vaccinated unnecessarily.

Technology designed to reduce the likelihood of vaccine reactions.

Unwanted proteins are associated with injection-site pain and swelling. Highly purified 1/2mL Ultra vaccines, using Purefil Technology, are designed to decrease vaccination reactions associated with unwanted protein and debris, reducing proteins by up to 75%. Their efficacy and safety have been demonstrated extensively in real-world studies.

This article was reviewed/edited by board-certified veterinary behaviorist Dr. Kenneth Martin and/or veterinary technician specialist in behavior Debbie Martin, LVT.

Kim Campbell Thornton is content manager for Fear Free Pets and is an Elite Fear Free Certified Professional. She has been writing about dogs, cats, wildlife, and marine life since 1985 and is a recipient of multiple awards from the Cat Writers Association, Dog Writers Association of America, and American Society of Journalists and Authors. When she’s not writing or editing, she’s snuggling with Sparkles, her Cavalier King Charles Spaniel.

TruCan, TruFel, Elanco and the diagonal bar logo are trademarks of Elanco or its affiliates.  Other company and product names are trademarks of their respective owners. ©2023 Elanco or its affiliates. PM-US-22-2260

References

1 2022 AAHA Canine Vaccination Guidelines. https://www.aaha.org/globalassets/02-guidelines/2022-aaha-canine-vaccination-guidelines/resources/2022-aaha-canine-vaccinations-guidelines.pdf Accessed on December 13, 2022.

2 2020 AAHA/AAFP Feline Vaccination Guidelines. https://www.aaha.org/globalassets/02-guidelines/feline-vaccination-guidlines/resource-center/2020-aahaa-afp-feline-vaccination-guidelines.pdf Accessed on December 13, 2022.

3 White, A., et. al. “Hotspots of canine leptospirosis in the United States of America.” The Veterinary Journal, 222 (2017), 29-35. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S109002331730059X Accessed on December 13, 2022.

4 Companion Animal Parasite Council (CAPC) 2022 Pet Parasite Forecast. https://capcvet.org/about-capc/news-events/companion-animal-parasite-council-releases-2022-annual-pet-parasite-forecast/ Accessed on December 13, 2022.

5  Smith, Amanda M., et. al. “Potential Drivers for the Re-Emergence of Canine Leptospirosis in the United States and Canada.” Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (2022).  https://www.mdpi.com/2414-6366/7/11/377/htm Accessed December 13, 2022.

6 Little, Susan, et. al. “2020 AAFP Feline Retrovirus Testing and Management Guidelines.” Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery, Vol. 22, Issue 1 (2020). https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1098612X19895940 Accessed December 13, 2022.

This post is brought to you by our sponsor, Elanco, the maker of TruFel Ultra Vaccines.

Sandra Toney

When she was 12 years old, Karina Salvo, DVM, CTPEP, CVFT, CVMMP, volunteered to work for a one-doctor practice. Cleaning cages, doing laundry, and walking dogs led to watching her first surgeries. From that point, she knew that her career path would lead to veterinary school.

But one thing she and the veterinarians she grew up working for—and later, with—didn’t learn was how to make exams easier on pets. When she became aware of Fear Free®, though, it made sense to her that veterinary visits should be less frightening and more fun for patients.—not to mention for veterinarians and technicians themselves.

“The one thing that I noticed in each and every practice was the frequency in using force to hold a patient,” says Salvo, now an Elite Fear Free Certified® DVM who also has certifications as a palliative and end-of-life practitioner (CTPEP) and in branches of Traditional Chinese Medicine (CVFT and CVMMP). “Some of the staff wrestled what I thought were highly aggressive dogs down to the ground in order to give a single vaccine or draw blood. The end result was someone got hurt, scratched, urine and feces everywhere, and a dog that was left splayed out and panting on the floor in exhaustion or cowering in the corner. This was the ambience of the veterinary field I grew up in.”

As she learned more from Fear Free, she found that in-clinic exams became easier.

Now she owns her own practice, AcuVetDoc Veterinary Reproduction & Animal Care Wellness Clinic, in Royal Palm Beach, Florida, where she treats not only pets but also wildlife. That allows her to see only one patient at a time.

“I can practice 100 percent the way I choose to. I intentionally do not have a receptionist or a technician,” Salvo says. “Patients are scheduled on the hour instead of every 15 minutes. This allows me to work one on one with the patient and the owner. My ‘team’ in my practice is the owner, myself, and the patient. By working together, all of us can better understand the patient and the medicine. Practicing this way has allowed me to build trust in my patients as well as owners because both are comfortable.”

Salvo greets clients and patients at the door so she can watch how the animal walks into the building. If owners have given permission beforehand, treats are on the carpeted floor as they enter.

Animals who have previously had poor experiences at veterinary clinics may be directed into an exam room that resembles a living room—with carpet, a bookcase, leather sofa, chair, and hidden treats. While Salvo sits on the floor, pockets filled with treats, and talks to the owner, patients can explore, approaching when they’re comfortable. If they need more time, Salvo may simply hand out treats during the visit, holding off on an exam. She discusses this possibility with clients beforehand so that they’re aware the first interaction may be a “meet-and-greet,” with the exam portion on a subsequent visit.

Many of her patients enjoy “playtime,” a rewarding exam in which Salvo uses tasty treats to get patients to move on their own but in a fashion that allows her to examine them. For instance, she might get them to sit or turn their head so she can look inside ears or examine the mouth.

One patient who stands out in her memory was a 12-week-old Cockapoo puppy whose first experience at a veterinary clinic had involved being held on an exam table while he screamed, attempted to bite, and urinated and defecated. The veterinarian told the owners that their puppy had mental health issues and should be returned to the breeder. This time they were hoping for a better experience.

Salvo met the owners outdoors, where she had set up chairs and some treats. They sat down, talked about how the puppy was doing at home, and handed out treats to the puppy. Salvo assigned homework: to find tasty, high-value treats that could be dropped on the floor any time visitors came to the home and to be used as rewards during training. She suggested walking the puppy in areas far enough away from people that strangers wouldn’t want to pet the dog but close enough that he could see people, other dogs, and vehicles such as carts. Offering high-value treats during these walks would contribute to forming a positive association with the experience and a connection with the owners.

At the second visit a few days later, Salvo again met the owners outside and had tasty treats already on the ground for her new friend to gobble up. Eventually, the puppy approached her and she was able to perform an exam and give an oral vaccine as the puppy sat next to the clients and received treats.

“On subsequent visits, we sat next to each other outside, and he came and laid on my lap and became more interactive with me and less afraid of the environment,” says Salvo. “With a cheese and Cheerio trail to lead him inside, we made it to the scale and an exam room!”

Three months after that first visit, the puppy frequents farm fairs, Home Depot, and PetSmart, and comes running into the clinic to greet Salvo.

“This is an amazing story with very patient owners who were willing to take their time to understand and provide their dog with what he specifically needed when he needed it, redirection to something positive, protection from being thrown into the middle of a chaotic situation, and to slow introduction to the world around him,” she says.

Fear Free continues to make a difference in her practice. “The best feeling is when the owners are ready to leave and the patient stays behind and makes eye contact with me waiting for another fun treat,” Salvo says, “or when they return and they are pulling their owner into the building.”

This article was reviewed/edited by board-certified veterinary behaviorist Dr. Kenneth Martin and/or veterinary technician specialist in behavior Debbie Martin, LVT.

Sandra Toney has been writing about cats for over 25 years and is an award-winning member of Cat Writers Association and Dog Writers Association of America. She has written for many print and online magazines about cat health and behavior as well as authoring eight books. She lives in northern Indiana with her cat, Angel.

Want to learn more about Fear Free? Sign up for our newsletter to stay in the loop on upcoming events, specials, courses, and more by clicking here.

 
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The FAS Scale Deconstructed: The Importance of Addressing Stress Early On

In this recorded webinar, Fear Free’s Education Manager Lori Chamberland takes a closer look at each level of the FAS scale to empower you to score pets with greater confidence. You’ll see video examples of pets at each level of the scale and understand why it’s important to address stress early, rather than waiting until FAS 3 or higher to intervene.

You must be a Fear Free member and logged in to view this webinar.

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Successful Medication Strategies in a Fear Free World

In this recorded webinar, Sharon Minninger, DVM, discusses how we can modify our thoughts and actions to improve the “just medicate my pet” problem. She also addresses what other medication forms can be considered and how to develop strategies to train your team and your clients for success.

Brought to you by our friends at Covetrus

Building a Fear Free Team Culture

In this recorded webinar, join Dr. Julie Liu, DVM, as she discusses ways to engage and empower your team to get on board with Fear Free and provide a greater level of compassion for your patients.

Brought to you by our friends at Blue Buffalo