Toronto Star

How to safely perform first aid on your pet

- MARI A. SCHAEFER THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER

GLADWYNE, PA.— An injured dog will bite, even if it is your own.

If there was one takeaway at the first-aid class for K-9 police officers held at Gladwyne Fire Company recently it was this: Don’t take risks when a dog’s teeth are inches from your face.

“They have some deeply wired behaviours,” said Jon Detweiler, an emergency medical technician who was instructin­g about 15 officers on how to recognize and respond to medical emergencie­s involving their four-legged partners. “Please be ready for that.”

The officers and their companions from Montgomery and Delaware Counties (Pennsylvan­ia) gathered for the three-hour class and practice sessions. An afternoon class for paramedics, emergency medical technician­s and nurses addressed issues the group might encounter when responding to emergencie­s involving working canines. Much of what the profession­als learned about canine injuries due to car accidents, heatstroke, and penetratin­g trauma would be useful for owners of household pets as well, said Scott Kramer, a paramedic with Narberth Ambulance.

“Anything anybody can do in an emergency situation will help save a life,” said Sharon Minninger, a veterinari­an who was teaching the class. She and Detweiler own Telford Veterinary Hospital.

For working dogs with a strong drive to work, it is important their police partners know when to give them a break so they don’t overheat.

Hypertherm­ia or heatstroke can happen any time, said Detweiler. “This is huge. This is 100-per-cent preventabl­e.” It’s also an issue for household pets. “We had a dog die this week,” she said about a case at her veterinary practice. The family pet was accidental­ly left outside in the sun all day without water. “They start with a higher body temperatur­e than us. It doesn’t take long to get to a high level.”

You can’t tell by just feeling a dog if its temperatur­e is elevated. Those ear thermomete­rs are built for hu- mans and useless in pets.

Instead, look for symptoms such as altered behaviour. A pet may collapse or vomit as well. Placing ice bags under the pet’s armpits, covering them with a wet towel, cooling the pads of their feet with alcohol swabs, or placing them in a pool or stream will help bring down high body tem- perature, she said.

The class included CPR instructio­n, recognizin­g signs and symptoms that would signal a medical crisis, basic first aid and emergency planning for transporta­tion and hospital treatment before it is needed.

The seminar hit home for police officer Matt Stadulis, who was there with his service dog, Nika, a 3-yearold Belgian Malinois trained as a patrol and explosives dog. A few years ago Stadulis’ first canine partner, Brock, suffered a seizure at a training class, he said.

“I didn’t know what to do,” Stadulis said. First aid had not been a part of the comprehens­ive training officers go through with their canine partners, he said.

Brock, now retired at age 9, has fully recovered, the officer said.

The first-aid class “gives you the confidence to know what to do,” Stadulis said.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? First-aid training for pets is not just for K-9 police officers. It’s also useful for household pet owners.
DREAMSTIME First-aid training for pets is not just for K-9 police officers. It’s also useful for household pet owners.

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