This brand new manual provides a practical guide on how to deal with various clinical situations that arise when working with cats and dogs in a shelter environment.
Written from the perspective of the clinical presentation
Principles of evidence-based veterinary medicine are incorporated where appropriate
CONTENTS
What is shelter medicine?
• Top tips for a shelter medicine vet
Ethics and animal welfare
• Using the ethical framework to make decisions
Pragmatic decision-making in the charity situation
• Dealing with the elderly thin cat
• Dealing with the elderly dog
• Dealing with heart murmurs in dogs and cats
• Dealing with the itchy dog: is it atopic dermatitis?
Population control and management
• Setting up a population control program
• TNR/CNR checklist
• Euthanasia and shelters
Optimizing neutering programmes
• General anaesthesia protocols for early neutering
Shelter metrics
Principles of infectious disease and transmission
Biosecurity in shelters
• A brief overview of disinfectants
Shelter design and the flow of animals through a shelter
Preventive medicine in the shelter environment
• Intake assessment for animals entering shelters
Diarrhoea in the dog in the shelter environment
Diarrhoea in the cat in the shelter environment
Respiratory disease in the dog in the shelter environment
• Rehoming a coughing dog
Respiratory disease in the cat in the shelter environment
• Rehoming a snotty cat
Skins diseases in shelter animals
Managing FeLV/FIV in the multi-cat/shelter environment
Managing feline coronavirus and feline infectious peritonitis in the multi-cat/shelter environment
• Toxoplasmosis
• Exotic diseases in shelters
• Zoonotic diseases in shelters
Behaviour and stress management in the shelter environment
• Current thinking on dog behaviour
• Current thinking on cat behaviour
• Socialization of puppies
• Socialization of kittens
• Dealing with the aggressive dog
• Dealing with the hard-to-handle cat
• Environmental enrichment for dogs in shelters
• Environmental enrichment for cats in shelters
Charities, their policies and their staff
Law and shelter medicine
• Dealing with a stray dog
• Dealing with a stray cat
The shelter veterinary team
Working with the non-vet shelter team
• Hoarding
• Non-accidental injury
Training and education in the shelter environment
Rachel Dean qualified from the University of Glasgow in 1996 and, after several years of working in mixed and small animal practice in both the UK and Australia, moved to the University of Bristol where she worked on research into infectious diseases. Rachel obtained a Diploma in Feline Medicine from the Royal Veterinary College and is a recognised specialist. Since 2009, Rachel has been based at the University of Nottingham, where she directs the Centre for Evidence-based Veterinary Medicine.
Margaret Roberts is a graduate of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Edinburgh and continued on to work in small animal practice around the world before returning to the UK and eventually joining Cats Protection to manage the charity’s veterinary department.
Jenny Stavisky worked for several years in mixed practice after qualifying from the University of Edinburgh. She then moved to the University of Liverpool to pursue a PhD in epidemiology and virology, after which she joined the School of Veterinary Medicine and Science at the University of Nottingham as a lecturer in shelter medicine. Jenny is a founding member of the Association of Charity Vets as well as the Vets in the Community project.
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