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Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Thursday, May 07, 2009
Pet First Aid
First Aid for Your Pet
Our pets can suddenly become ill or injured. Some of us do panic and don't know what to do when it happens. It's important not to self-diagnose your pet's symptoms. You must first determine the situation what happened and when, and if your pet is feeling worse, better or the same since the incident occured.
Here is information about First Aid for your pet and tells you what to do when your dog or cat becomes injured or ill.
Stablize Your Pet
It is important to stablize your dog or cat's injury or illness before getting your pet to a veterinary clinic. Some simple first aid can provide a necessary and life saving treatment until medical help can be reached.
Stay Calm
You must stay calm. If you panic, so is your pet. When you are calm, you can describe the situation or the incident accurately to your veterinarian, who can then better assess your pet's condition.
Ask Help While You're Administering First Aid
While you are focus on administering your pet's injury, such as applying pressure to a wound to help stop the bleeding or evaluating the best way to carry your pet without causing further pain or injury. Ask others to call your veterinarian.
Find Our Your Pet's Temperature
Identify your dog or cat's body temperature. The normal body temperature for dogs and cats is 100 to 102.5 degrees.
Handle With Care
It is very important to restrain an injured dog or pet. It's not only for your safety but for your pet as well. Muzzle a dog unless he is unconscious, has difficulty breathing, or has a mouth injury. However, muzzles can inhibit their breathing and create additional distress.
For Example:
Broken Bones: Limping or favoring a limb
1. Muzzle your dog or use an E-collar for your cat and manipulate his head away from you while placing him in a padded carrier.
2. Got to the clinic immediately. Pelvis fractures may not be readily apparent.
Burns: Sign of burns or ingested toxin-Drooling, pawing at his mouth or swallowing excessively
1. Restrain your pet. Flush burns with cold water or apply a wash cloth cooled with ice water.
2. Take your pet to the nearest clinic within the hour or immediately if electrocution was the source of injury. Bring the chemical agent with you, if possible.
External Bleeding: Hemorrhaging
1. Restrain your pet for your safety and your pet's protection. Apply thick gauze on the wound until bleeding stops. If bleeding is severe or a limb is hemorrhaging, apply a tourniquet between the wound and the heart.
2. Go to the clinic immediatey.
Internal Bleeding: Blood in urine, coughing blood, bleeding from the nose, mouth, ears or rectum, or pale guns, collapses or has a weak or rapid pulse.
1. Keep your dog or cat warm and as quiet as possible. Find out if your pet responds when you call your pet's name.
2. Go to the clinic imeediately.
Find out more information at:
petinsurance.com
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Save a pet and Adopt a Dog
There are 7 million adoptable pets are killed each year according to Save-A-Pet.com. The numbers are growing because the families in foreclosures abandon increasing numbers of pets in recent months.
Are you looking for a dog?
According to the many shelters and dog rescue organizations, there are 20-30% of dogs for adoption in public shelters are purebred. The other 70-75% of dogs are lovable, wonderful mixed-breed dogs, just waiting for a chance to be your perfect companion.
If you are looking for a dog, the shelters and dog rescue organizations help match you up with the perfect dog for adoption. If you have your heart set on a specific breed, Breed dog rescue groups that specialize in a particular breed of dog and chances are, you can find your purebred dog for adoption right in your area.
Many people think that shelters and dog rescues are filled with pets that were discarded because they’re “bad”. On the contrary, most dogs for adoption are potentially wonderful companions that became the victims of irresponsible owners who impulse bought a puppy from a pet store or breeder and didn’t give dog adoption the careful thought it requires.
Information from Save-A-Pet.com
For adoption information, visit www.1-800-save-a-pet.com