Dr. Coates is a veterinarian based in the other “Sunshine State” – that's Colorado to the rest of you – where she lives and plays with a varied range of animals. She shares her professional and personal experiences, Monday through Friday, here on petMD's blog, the Fully Vetted. Log in for your daily dose of her insight and wisdom.

 

Shelter Dog Adoption Quandaries

March 03, 2010 / (23) comments


Let’s say you are one of the dedicated minions longing to save the world one dog at a time. I worship you. Specifically, I respect your zeal for the zillions of homeless dogs waiting hopefully for you to pour your love and devotion into the lucky one you choose every ten years or so.

Thank God you exist, for without you and your commitment to the canine cause there would be millions more dead dogs to account for in our country each year.

But have you been to a municipal shelter recently? In Miami-Dade County, where I live, I can’t go to my local shelter without bursting into tears at the sights, the sounds, and the smells of the devastation all around me.

Lest you think me overly dramatic, I should tell you that our local shelter is a serious dump. We have the choice of driving just forty minutes farther and finding another couple of shelters that are better maintained through private sources of funding. The government supported county shelter, however, would curl your toes.

This week my hospital saw one of its casualties. An owned (if poorly cared for) dog belonging to one of our less devoted clients absconded from his yard and found his way to the pound via animal control's limo service. This tagless, microchip-free dog was in lockup for several days before the owners finally determined his whereabouts. By that time he had contracted kennel cough and distemper. I guess you could say he was lucky in that he somehow escaped euthanasia.

According to our records, this young, intact Rottweiler mix had never completed his series of puppy vaccinations. Distemper, at full-blown epidemic level inside the shelter walls, was probably hot on his heels within 24 hours of his incarceration. Usually more devastating to young pups, the distemper virus can still kill adults — this particular case ended in euthanasia after the virus finally claimed his brain.

Shelters often suffer overwhelmingly from diseases due to the close quarters the dogs and cats must share. Distemper, kennel cough, and tick-borne infections run rampant, particularly in facilities that don’t meet certain criteria for air handling. The cats are chronically infected with upper respiratory diseases. One giant AC unit means every dog and cat gets to breathe the same infected air. Poor sanitation due to skeleton staffing means that transmissible parasites, bacteria, and viruses flourish in the unchecked filth.

So how can I sanely recommend that anyone adopt a dog from one of these facilities? As much as I want to curb the problem, I cannot in good conscience suggest that my clients take on the potential heartache that comes with rescuing dogs from such places. I usually find them dogs fostered by individuals I know, or recommend they drive to the neighboring county where the facilities are cleaner and disease is not so widespread.

To be sure, there are special people out there who do prefer to take on Miami-Dade Animal Services shelter dogs, even knowing the issues they are likely to face. These people rock my world. But, as with parents who adopt special-needs children, they are few and far between.

I fear that I am doing a disservice to my community in actively counseling my clients to stay away from this facility and others like it. But, until conditions improve dramatically I will continue to urge my clients to drive on. I can write letters to my local paper (I have) and lend my voice in municipal meetings (I have) and even offer to volunteer (they’ve turned me down), but nothing will change until the entire community voices its demand for change.

Until then I will keep diverting my clients, friends and family from such places, even if it results in the acceleration of their downward spiral. Perhaps sinking to rock bottom is the only way to get the attention of those who have the power to effect real change. Clearly a distemper epidemic is not enough. Sometimes even vets consider the utility of a rabies wake-up call.

 

Dr. Patty Khuly

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COMMENTS (23)
1
DRIVE ON???
by Amy on 03/03/2010 08:25am

I think your comments on this shelter are very irresponsible. Basically you say ignore and it will rot and get better. Is that really a proper solution from someone of your profession? It seems a very righteous stance rather than a truly humane and educated effort.
Those animals and that system deserves more than your shallow thinking. How about ideas of how to help rather than directions to drive past?

2
Amy- read the piece again
by Donna Watlins on 03/03/2010 08:54am

I think your comments are irresponsible and ignorant to boot. Apparently you read a few sentences from the article and just started typing. Did you miss this part?

I fear that I am doing a disservice to my community in actively counseling my clients to stay away from this facility and others like it. But, until conditions improve dramatically I will continue to urge my clients to drive on. I can write letters to my local paper (I have) and lend my voice in municipal meetings (I have) and even offer to volunteer (they’ve turned me down), but nothing will change until the entire community voices its demand for change.

3
Shelter adoptions
by delores lee on 03/03/2010 09:18am

I agree with you when you talk about health problems in local shelters. I volunteer with my county's animal protection league. I mostly foster pregnant cats and kittens until they are old enough, healthy and have been altered to be put in our adoption system. Some are surrendered to us but we get most from local shelters. I can almost guarantee there's going to be an upper respiratory infection. Unfortunately there seems to be a strain lately that doesn't respond to Clavamox. It still is worth the extra effort it takes to get them healthy and get them to their "forever home".

4
Shelter Adoptions
by Pam on 03/03/2010 10:33am

Dr. K, I'm having a hard time understanding your stance on the local shelter problem. I'm sorry, but I feel you're way off the mark here and shame on you. I never expected this "holier" attitude from you. The animals in a municiple shelter DESERVE the same opportunities as the ones in nice, clean, more cared for facilities. Do you think the animals made the choice of where to be housed? It's certainly not their fault but you would penalize them. What you propose to your clients isn't hurting the shelter near as much as it's hurting those poor animals that have to live in the filth & stench. Maybe it wouldn't hurt in advising your clients to please go save those animals - they don't deserve to be there?

I have three rescues and do rescue transport. Thank God, we don't only deal with the "nice, clean" facilities. We try to help the ones that need help the most.

That's my 2 cents and I need to quit before I give you my dollar's worth!

5
Shelter Dog Adoption Quandaries
by Kathy on 03/03/2010 11:02am

Like Donna's response to Amy, I think that Pam needs to read the article again. And for my 2 cents worth, until there is loud public outcry, not much will change in your municipal shelter - that's what it usually takes (that and a lot of volunteerism).

6
Shelter Adoptions
by Pam on 03/03/2010 11:16am

Thank you Kathy but I actually read it three times to make sure I wasn't missing something. Even Dr. K admits she may be "doing a disservice" by directing her clients away from the Miami-Dade Animal Services. She also says "nothing will change until the entire community voices it's demand for change." Does this mean to steer clear of the problem until it's fixed? Dear Lord I hope not. I would hope one voice could be the start of the community involvement. However I feel from the bottom of my heart these animals are stuck in the middle and without the help of our communities, which includes the public and private sector (both of which I hope includes veterinarians) the numbers and homeless will continue to grow out of control. Again, the conditions in which these homeless animals are living is not their fault, it's ours. So for pete's sake, let's save them!

7
Shelter problems
by KateH on 03/03/2010 11:47am

Pam and Donna - it's nice to think that one person can change the world, but just pulling a couple dogs from a hellhole, while helping those dogs, will not change the hellhole. So many city/towns are run by idiots and scumbags who don't care and sometimes actively increase problems at shelters because it suits their ideas of how they should run things. Unless their bosses - the community who puts them in office and pays their salaries - stand up in sufficient numbers to say "No - you're wrong, and you're fired!" it won't change.

Doctor Khuly has an obligation to not only her animal patients, but to her human clients to assist them in understanding the health risks of the animals they already have and those they may acquire. It would be irresponsible to the human half of the client-patient relationship to suggest they take on animals whose health problems could cause the humans to not be able to deal with the bills and emotions they will encounter. She has tried to let others know about the problem (many times), she has tried to assist with direct care at the shelter and in trying to get the 'powers-that-be' to give a hoot about the problem (multiple times) and been turned down. Until others step up to the plate to help, she should not have to also lie to adopters about what to expect if they adopt a pet from that shelter.

8
by Raven on 03/03/2010 01:31pm

Cant the Miami Dade municipal Shelter be reported to higher authorities? What about the animal protection people who do undercover filming of the enrvironments. Not until it hits TV and embarrasses some politician or gets him fired will anything change. The vidoes of the factory farming conditions helped spark the newer laws. Just saying we should all let one animal protection agency know about this place, wouldnt investigations happen? Not to be ignorant but tryign to think of any way to force people to shine a light on this place.

9
Shelter Adoptions
by Pam on 03/03/2010 02:08pm

"It would be irresponsible to the human half of the client-patient relationship to suggest they take on animals whose health problems could cause the humans to not be able to deal with the bills and emotions they will encounter."

KateH, these are problems with all shelter animals not just dirty inhumane ones we see so often. If this were the case then we would discourage clients from adopting from any shelter. Also normally, the shelters like Dr. K has described in Miami-Dade are high kill shelters. Do I think one person can do this alone as you suggest? Absolutely not. But if vets are any authoritative figures are turning clients away from these shelters the animals already there don't have a chance a any kind of decent life. I have a rescue myself that came from a very unreputable high-kill facility and thank God I wasn't deterred from adopting her. It's not the animals there that are undesireable, it's the facility. So you want to doom the animals to a life in surroundings you wouldn't even step foot in, not to mention euthanasia because the humans have failed them miserably? I wish better for those guys.

10
miami dade shelter
by Cal Bailey on 03/03/2010 06:58pm

DR. Patty,

As a blogger with an international audience, you have misused your influence. You have given ammunition to the enemy - the people who sell animals for profit and breed them indiscriminately.

Why was your client's dog intact? Why was it delinquent on distemper? How is it that it "went missing"? These are all problems we face together when people are not responsible pet owners in the first place. Then the dog ended up in the Miami-Dade Shelter. Are you saying the dog should be saved because he was YOUR CLIENT? His owner was not any better than those of any of the other strays at the shelter that you advise people to avoid saving.

I applaud your efforts to change this awful and disgraceful place. But please - remember that you have a responsibility to the other animals that need help and it you have to tell people to avoid the place - do it on a local level.

11
Miami - Dade A.S.
by Julia J on 03/04/2010 12:05am

I am all too familar with the shelter that Dr. Khuly mentioned. She was not exaggerating about the disease that is rampant there. It is a horrible place. There have been efforts to improve, they now vaccinate animals upon intake, they have increased their adoption numbers, and for the most part, the underpaid, understaffed,overworked employees try to do their best. There are several reputable rescues -including mine - that pull dogs from there. We know that these dogs are at risk for Distemper, Parvo, kennel cough, Ehrlichia or all of the above, and we quarantine them for 3 weeks (whether or not they are showing symptoms) before putting them up for adoption (after spay/neuter, HW test and vaccines). Dr. Khuly, several these are in your area, so if you point your clients in that direction, they may adopt from the rescue. This allows the rescue to get another dog from MDAS. A win-win!
The whopping number of animals that goes through there is mind-boggling. Right now there are 192 stray or found dogs there, and 242 dogs there for adoption (including a 3 yr. old female English Bulldog for you, Dr. K!). And this is just the dogs! Don't believe me? Go to PetHarbor.com , type in Miami for city, then check Miami-Dade Animal Services -

I can understand Dr. Khuly's frustration about this shelter. A dog came into her practice with Distemper! What if there were puppies there? Plus, I think she is upset (I hope I am not putting words into your mouth, Dr. K.) because people that adopt dogs from a shelter, and a dog dies, that person is going to paint shelter dogs with the same brush, and won't be willing to try adopting a dog from a shelter again.
If those of you criticizing the conditions of shelters, volunteer there! See for youself the conditions there.See the struggles that happen every day behind the scenes.

12
Miami Dade Shelter
by Shelli Holland-Handy on 03/05/2010 11:11am

Our shelter in Tulsa, OK, was in the exact same boat as the Miami Dade shelter a few years ago. Through the hard work of animal advocates in our community, we were able to educate city officials about the importance of improving conditions. Funds were raised to have an evaluation done by HSUS which led to the creation of a task force (on which I served) to determine the priorities at the shelter. Since then, some substantial changes have been made including a new director and several facility improvements. No, its still not perfect and there is still a lot of work to be done. The process was not an easy one. It seemed at times that we would never get the various groups to agree on what the best path was. However, I take great pride in knowing that we made substantial progress and found common ground among our various advocacy groups in the process. Disease is minimal, adoptions are up, the public perception of the shelter is much more positive and the morale of the staff is greatly improved. All the advocacy groups have started working together. Plans for a new shelter are in the works although it might be several years down the road.

When people criticize the shelter here, I like to remind them of a few things. First, unlike privately funded rescues, the shelter is run by our city government which is suffering such severe budget shortfalls that teachers and police officers are being laid off. Unfortunately, the animals get the short end of the stick when budget allocations are being made. Additionally, any time there is a policy change, budget modification, etc., the shelter director has to contend with the decision making process of the city. It is not as simple as presenting an idea to a board of directors and having it approved within a few days. It takes months, even years to see change in a low ranking priority such as a city shelter. Finally, and most importantly, the city did not create the mess the shelter is in. It's citizens did by not being responsible pet owners. Our shelter is trying to make the most of a limited budget, bureaucratic red tape and an out of control pet overpopulation problem.

I completely understand Dr. Khuly's reservations in recommending people adopt from the shelter. For those who criticize, try to focus your energy on making positive change rather than pointing fingers. It is not easy but most of the time, anything worth having takes a lot of hard work and time and, believe me, it has been well worth it.

13
Intact?
by Donna on 03/05/2010 12:33pm

Cal, you ask why the clients dog is intact? That decision is not up to the vet. It's up to the client. And, thank God, in most places, fascist mandatory spay/neuter does not yet exist. It almost feels like you are blaming the vet for having an irresponsible client. She is a vet, not a babysitter.

14
Pam
by Donna on 03/05/2010 12:39pm

What exactly is it that you think Dr. Khuly should be doing? This is what she wrote:

I will continue to urge my clients to drive on. I can write letters to my local paper (I have) and lend my voice in municipal meetings (I have) and even offer to volunteer (they’ve turned me down), but nothing will change until the entire community voices its demand for change.

Do you propose she go down there, take the shelter over by force a la Bruce Willis and turn things around single handed?

15
Shelter Adoption
by Marcha on 03/06/2010 10:16am

I am soo sorry Miami-Dade Municipal facility is so bad.
Sounds like a call to improve the facility instead of urging others to get a dog elsewhere!

16
shelter
by Taxidermia on 03/07/2010 09:49am

reading your comments, I can tell you one thing: you're lucky you haven't seen Croatian shelters. or Serbian.
here on Balkans people are treated worse than animals in shelter dr. K mentions, so you can only imagine what they do to animals...
http://balkansanimalsuffering.wordpress.com/
in Belgrade the stray dogs are running rampant - they form packs of 20-30 and attack passers-by. I've been there, so I've seen it and experienced it. luckily, they were afraid of my Rottweiler since he was challenging the pack leader, but my friends and acquintances weren't so lucky and got bitten.....when there's some kind of international sports meeting in that part of Belgrade, the authorities just euthanise those packs by mass-poisoning them. until the next meeting they multiply again, of course. and so the circle continues....
yes, here in Balkans people are barbaric to animals and to other humans alike. when I read about dr. K's experiences, I smile and think: "look, here they're having doubts about implanting artificial *es*icles to neutered dogs! how lovely!"
you worry about diseases running rampant in your shelters, and here a few volunteers in municipal shelters with no separate boxes tries to stop dogs from killing and eating each other. in a "shelter" in Sisak dogs are being shot with a shotgun after two days, despite the 30-day period that's being stated by law. nobody really cares.
http://www.jutarnji.hr/uzas-u-sisackom-sklonistu-za-zivotinje--pse-ubijaju-puskom-kao-na-pokretnoj-traci/601349/
it's in Croatian, but you can see a few pics....on the first pic, the black dog was locked in a box in a dark and secluded space, with no food or water (they don't feed them for those two days) and was leaking blood and urine when they released him for the photo shoot. the volunteers were told to "back off".
here are my 2 cents. it's not that Miami strays shouldn't have better care and that you don't fight for a noble cause, I support that, but I wanted you to take a look on the conditions on the other side of the world....

17
municipal/local shelters
by ana elisa on 03/07/2010 10:10am

Dear Dr. Patty,

You are absolutely right in what you say.
I outline one of your sentences:
"...but nothing will change until the entire community voices its demand for change."
Indeed, it won´t.
I am a municipal veterinarian working in Portugal and here we can observe already several Municipalities investing in their local shelters, proper animal support, education and information about these issues.
Unfortunately, many are still like what you describe in Miami.
Presently, I have been diagnosed Lyme Disease (something almost every doctor says that does not exist in Portugal..) and I actually only work with shelter animals in the municipal pound and am not exactly rolling around any grass or garden...
Best regards,
ana

18
article
by Dr. Rosset on 03/07/2010 11:09am

This article is fine as far as it goes in trying to move the public from apathy, but the only people who read these articles are already helping. But what I want to see written every where is how these dogs wind up in the shelter and nearly 88% according to the most recent data are mixed breeds. If you take away the number of wild dogs and yes the US actually has wild dogs called the "yalla dog" that has DNA like the early dingos and not at all like the dogs of today then we would have far fewer dogs in the shelters. Who is looking out for the Wild dogs that should be left alone as these are not domesticated animals at all, but have the early DNA like the wild dogs of AFrica, Asia, and Australia. We are going overboard on killing our wild cats and wild dogs of the Americas which are not pet material at all and are often mistaken for abused animals since they show aggression like you should expect from a wild animal. Something to think about regarding feral cats. If feral cats are wild and not just lost family pets 
as everyone seems to think, we should be thinking about them differently.  
We would not think of interfering with a wild species and in fact are told not to bother fawns 
if we come across them as their mother is nearby.  Animals in the wild often are slimmer and incur
bites from other species.  
But here is an interesting bit to think about with PETA's movement to
euthanize all feral cats, in doing so they are removing one of the main predators of rodents from the community.  Mice and rats are prolific breeders.
I remember seeing a documentary of a rodent infestation in Australia where the mice had literally taken over the farm.
You couldn't open a door without mice spilling out. This farm in an isolated region had no predators and no cats. 
Scientific studies show that the feral cat's diet is 98% rodent.  If we neuter and spay, plus remove feral cats either by killing or placing their kits in homes what 
do you think will happen to the rodent population? Here are some things we do know culled from various experiments and studies on rodent and feral cat populations.

 "Man can reduce rodent populations and keep them low by permanently eliminating their food, water, or harborage only if he also increases
the predatory activities of foxes, cats, birds, and snakes".  Report on rodent control and its limiting factors - World Health.

"the removal of cats had unintended consequences, such as on Macquarie Island where the removal of cats caused an explosion in the number of rabbits and rats which harmed native seabirds.[9][10] The removal of the rats and rabbits is scheduled for 2007 and is expected to take up to seven years and $24 million dollars." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feral_cat
 Mice and rats are still there because they keep coming from nearby boats. People forget rats and mice can swim great distances if they need to. 
"Plague is the "Black Death" that once killed 25 million people in Europe, Asia, and Africa.  No major urban outbreak of plague has occurred the United States since 1924.  However, a reservoir of the disease exists in wild rodents of the western states, where the bacteria are transmitted from one rodent to another and sometimes to man by the bite of rodent fleas.  There is always the danger that domestic rodents will become infected, and that they, in turn, will carry the infection to human population centers.  The disease is often fatal to the rat and the flea, and the death rate in untreated human cases is extremely high (26, 63, 77, 78, 100)."  
According to Responsible Wildlife Management, we have seen our fair share of
the plague epidemic here in the United States, with the most recent large
reported occurrence in Los Angeles between 1924 and 1925. More documented
cases have been found within the United States; however, only 10 to 15 people
are affected annually and they are scattered amongst rural cities.  According to the World Health
Organization (WHO) approximately 1,000 to 3,000 cases of the plague are
reported annually, mostly localized in or surrounding Africa, Asia, South America,
and the United States.
Rome, Italy is perhaps the city with the largest feral cat population in the world; its population has been estimated to be between 250,000 and 350,000, organized in about 2,000 colonies, some of them living in famous ancient places such as the Colosseum.[2] Some historians believe the Romans' affection for cats dates from the Roman Empire's conquest of Egypt, where royalty kept cats. Others believe that Rome was spared from devastating outbreaks of the bubonic plague by the city's feral cat population, which kept Rome's rat population low, thus reducing a key plague carrying vector. Whatever the case, Rome's affection for stray felines remains strong.
If we kill off feral cats or reduce their populations we may bring about unintended consequences such as what happened on the Macquarie Island. 
We know too little to assume that feral cats don't contribute to our well being.
Untrained and unknowing animal control officers, rescue workers and volunteers are killing off these animals without evening knowing that they are killing off the last repository of the original wild species. These animals should be left alone in the wild. How to tell do your DNA or read National Geographic. These Yalla dogs look like any mixed breed dog. Go to the http://www.carolinadogs.com/
or http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/03/0311_030311_firstdog.html

19
Adopt the dog, not the location
by EAB on 03/19/2010 01:35pm

I have never adopted an animal from a shelter without the right of "test drive." When I get a shelter animal, they go to the vet as soon as possible. If major issues are identified, the pet gets returned along with the prognosis. A shelter animal is much like a used car. The "dealer" doesn't have a whole lot of concern about the health or training of that animal. Because of this, shelter animals are a bit of a challenge. That being said, our current dog was adopted from a substandard shelter and even with a load of parasites I think we'll keep her. That being said, if I had known the shelter was that bad in the begining, i cannot say we would have went. Unfortunately, I had one cat that had such internal and, as per my vet, not economically fixed issues, that she was returned to be put down. I then adopted a healthy cat from the same shelter.

One more thing to consider. We are lucky that our local county owned and run animal shelter is fairly well ran and staffed. For those that aren't as well run like the one Dr. K describes, in most cases these Govt owned facilities cannot solicit volunteers or private money. Unbelievable, eh?

20
People skim, they dont read
by DoganDogs on 03/25/2010 11:38am

Dont take the negative comments too seriously. If a reader actually reads the entire post, its obvious that you are torn and make reluctant recommendations to "drive on".

I think its better for future dog owners to "drive on" and adopt a healthy pet they can care for (given their financial capabilities for example) rather than adopt a pet that will bankrupt them and wind up back in the shelter.

For those who understand the risks (which you did outline in this article) and are saintly enough to care for a city-shelter dog, by all means, dont "drive on", instead, rock-on...lol sorry couldn't resist :-)

21
Other GREAT alternatives
by plooshness on 05/09/2010 12:55pm

"I fear that I am doing a disservice to my community in actively counseling my clients to stay away from this facility and others like it."

Miami Dade public shelters can be overwhelming for pet owners but there are other options that are just as helpful! Organizations based here in South FL (which can be found through PetFinder) such as Fairy Tails, Friends Forever Rescue, and Save a Deathrow Dog rescue animals from the street and from high-kill shelters.
These rescues are a safer alternative since every dog has vet visits and the volunteers spend time with the dogs and can give insight to each individual dogs' temperament so the potential owner can see what dog will fit his family best.

22
Chloe
by Chloe217 on 10/23/2010 12:56pm

On September 18,2010 we adopted a beautiful dog from Miami-Dade Animal Services. The first day home was wonderful, the children loved her and she even like our crazy cat. It was perfect, we were really happy for 1 night. Chloe was a bottomless pit she ate steak and rice her first night. The next morning I gave her some dry dog food, but she was not having any of that she climed on the kids table and ate my daughter's waffles. It was so funny. She just loved to eat. That 2nd night she began to cough and gag. Day 3 we took her to the vet - Kennel Cough- no problem antibiotics and cough syrup.

Week- 2 - Chloe's health started to decline rapidly, by her second cisit to the vet she had a runny nose and what appeared to be an eye infection. The doctor now suspected Distemper, we continued with the antibiotics and antibiotic eye drops. As long as she was eating the doctor had hope and so did I. I really thought that we could save her.

Week- 3 Chloe' was having trouble breating, I had to clean her crusty mucus off her nose, it was getting harder for her to breath and now she had stopped eating. We were feeding her broth through a medicine seringe. The vet gave her stonger antibiotics. Chloe seemed to have a will to live, and we wanted her to get better.

The night of October 22, 2010 Chloe, was having trouble walking, breathing, and just about everything. My husband ran to the store at about 10:00 p.m. to get her some pedialite. She drank it well and I had hopes for her recovery. At 11:30 p.m. she had her first and only seizure, she died instantly.

I had to explain to my 3 and 5 year old that Chloe had died and now was with god in Heaven, not an easy thing to do.

23
Chloe Continued
by Chloe217 on 10/23/2010 01:03pm

My husband took the remains of little Chloe to the vet for the death certificate and proper disposal of our little doggy. While he was at the vet there was another family in the waiting room that had adopted a dog from Miami-Dade Animal Services 2 days ago and their dog was now diagnosed with distemper. They were going to take the dog back to the shelter. What are the odds that in all of Miami Dade County to find some one in the same vet at the same time with the same problem. I can only wonder if there is a epidemic.

I don't blame the animal services workers. I blame the city and the Director of Animal Services. That place is a dump, its dirty, the air quality is horrible.

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About fully vetted

Jennifer Coates, DVM

Photo of Dr Coates

Image credit: Jim Piraino

...graduated with honors from the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine in 1999. In the years since, she has practiced veterinary medicine in Virginia, Wyoming, and Colorado. She is the author of several books about veterinary medicine and animal care, including the Dictionary of Veterinary Terms: Vet-Speak Deciphered for the Non-Veterinarian. Dr. Coates also writes short stories that focus on the strength and importance of the human-animal bond, and freelance articles relating to a variety of animal care and veterinary topics. Dr. Coates lives in Fort Collins, Colorado with her husband, daughter, and various species of pets.

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