Not exact matches
The stress on shelter staff is significant: no room to put ever more dogs; having to euthanize dogs to make room for new dogs; performing triage on sick
animals when space is limited; having to make hard choices about evening and weekend heating and lighting with a
small budget; no veterinarian or
vet tech on the staff; no evening or weekend staff; no time to network adoptable
animals; no available homes in the surrounding communities; inadequate transport vehicles; little or no support from local government; an
Animal Control Officer
often doing double duty, responsible also for managing the shelter; counties lacking even a shelter or inside kenneling.
No
vet care, no proper food, filthy
small cages in heat and cold for the over breed female that suffers to give a pup that is also
often ill.11000 dog sand cats
animals are killed each and every day and many are good
animals that die.
How many
small animal vets would associate the following with electromagnetic exposure: reproductive problems, lack of coordination, dizziness, nausea, swelling or dryness of mucus membranes, and loss of coordination, memory, and concentration as evidenced by training problems or what is
often diagnosed (in humans) as early onset senility?
The consequences of the condition are
often life - limiting and treating affected
animals has become a growing part of every
small -
animal vet's workload.