The program that was the subject of the PSPCA study may be the answer you've been searching for to help
sick dogs in your community.
Imagine over 200
sick dogs in a community of 40,000 people.
Not exact matches
We've invested our resources
in building
community collaborations where animal welfare organizations come together to develop successful models of lifesaving;
in veterinary colleges to help shelter medicine become part of the veterinary curriculum to train veterinarians to save the lives of
sick and injured
dogs and cats
in animal shelters; and
in the implementation of a national strategy to promote accountability and transparency
in animal shelter operations.
To achieve this goal, Maddie's Fund is investing its resources
in building
community collaborations where animal welfare organizations come together to develop successful models of lifesaving;
in veterinary colleges to help shelter medicine become part of the veterinary curriculum to train veterinarians to save the lives of
sick and injured
dogs and cats
in animal shelters; and
in the implementation of a national effort to promote accountability and transparency
in animal shelter operations.
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.
He grew up around this type of evil and
in his
sick mind it is ok... no amount of jail time or public apologies is going to change that... he needs some serious therapy and
community work with homeless
dogs to even begin to start to get my forgiveness.
Make this a year of hope and second chances for homeless, abandoned,
sick and injured cats and
dogs in our
community.
«Shelters
in Southern California, mostly those
in the Central Valley, are more and more pressured by the
community to lower euthanasia rates and find ways to home most
dogs, as long as they aren't ferocious or
sick.
The only reason that we have bites happening
in our
communities are usually loose
dogs,
dogs living on chains,
dogs living
in extremely abusive situations,
dogs that are uncomfortable or
sick but never ever, ever by breed type.
In addition to the obvious benefits to sick and injured pets, the program also provides an opportunity for dog owners to become involved in the veterinary communit
In addition to the obvious benefits to
sick and injured pets, the program also provides an opportunity for
dog owners to become involved
in the veterinary communit
in the veterinary
community.