September 16, 2020
Weekly News Roundup 9/11 to 9/17
This week: An inspirational league of veterinary superheroes, a cloned horse could save a species, and the ratio of labra to doodle in labradoodles.
September 16, 2020
This week: An inspirational league of veterinary superheroes, a cloned horse could save a species, and the ratio of labra to doodle in labradoodles.
October 14, 2020
This week: The Tasmanian devils’ triumphant return, blinking slowly can help you communicate with cats, and dogs may like each other’s faces more than they like yours.
October 07, 2020
This week: Salmonella outbreaks reported in pet hedgehogs, a Colorado community college launches the country’s first veterinary technician apprenticeship program, and camels could catch COVID.
January 07, 2021
This week: Protected species status doesn’t necessarily protect neighboring species, the latest veterinary school rankings, and the reason platypuses are so . . . odd.
January 05, 2021
Early reports that pets could be COVID carriers led to speculation that dog abandonment might skyrocket. A new study looks at what actually happened.
July 25, 2019
The age at which large-breed dogs are spayed or neutered has become a hot topic with regard to obesity and nontraumatic orthopedic injuries, and a new study published July 17 in the journal PLOS ONE and based on data from the Morris Animal Foundation Golden Retriever Lifetime Study provides more information for veterinarians.
February 17, 2021
This week: A bigger, better dog genome, a Boston hospital uses buttons to help a cat heal, and dogs know when you’re watching them play.
February 24, 2021
This week: Dogs teach machines to scent disease, unlicensed pet surgery caught on tape, and the fight to save the elusive fishing cat.
February 25, 2021
AAHA is spearheading a new collaboration to share ideas, co-create solutions, and unify our profession’s approach to solving shared challenges.
April 30, 2021
Nearly everyone has faced COVID-related hardships in the past year. But there are several challenges unique to veterinary professionals.