Today's Veterinary Practice

MAY-JUN 2014

Today's Veterinary Practice provides comprehensive information to keep every small animal practitioner up to date on companion animal medicine and surgery as well as practice building and management.

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Generate Your Own Oxygen and Lower Your Clinic's Costs Oxygen Generating Systems Intl. 814 Wurlitzer Dr. N. Tonawanda, NY 14120 Toll Free 1-800-414-6474 716-564-5165 • fax 716-564-5173 • vets@ogsi.com www.ogsi.com Join the growing number of veterinarians who have ended their dependence on delivered liquid and cylinder oxygen. Hundreds of OGSI systems have been installed world-wide since 1995. • Easy to operate and maintain • Fully automatic • Low operating costs • Produces continuous medical grade oxygen OGS-20 Vertical & Horizontal Models Visit Us at AVMA Booth #1521 Today's Veterinary Practice May/June 2014 12 Today's VeTerinary news tvpjournal.com Survey Data Reveals Pet-Pet Owner Bond as the Key Driver of Hospital Success The American Animal Hospital Association (A AHA) in collaboration with IDEXX Laboratories commissioned a comprehensive survey of veterinary practices for the AAHA 2014 State of the Industry Report. The data reveals it's not the economy that drives the success or failure of veterinary practices; it's the relationship between a pet owner and their pet that truly drives success. The survey showed that hospitals with the highest growth shared a focus on the pet-pet owner bond, while 67% of hospitals that consistently outgrew revenue at more than 10% (known as Consistent Outgrowers) identified the pet- pet owner bond as "very important" to the success of their practice. The full results of the survey will be released in a white paper, available later this year. To obtain a fact sheet on the data please contact A AHA Communications Manager Kate Spencer. For more information visit aaha.org. ERRatuM The March/april 2014 issue erroneously listed incor- rect dosing for Cefovecin in table 2 of the Vital Vaccination series article Canine Lyme Disease: How Real the threat? by drs. richard Ford and andrew eschner (page 73). we regret the error. The corrected table is shown below. Table 2. TreaTMenT wiTh MediCaTion ANTI-MICROBIALS DOSAGE RECOMMENDED TREATMENT PERIOD PREFERRED tREatMENt Doxycycline 10 mg/kg Po Q 24 h 4–6 weeks (1-month minimum) aLtERNatIVE tREatMENtS: Effective against Other tick-Borne agents Cefovecin 8 mg/kg single sub- cutaneous injection Maximum 2 treatments Minocycline 12 mg/kg Q 12 h or 25 mg/kg Q 24 h 1 month (minimum) aLtERNatIVE tREatMENtS: Ineffective against Other tick-Borne agents amoxicillin 20 mg/kg Po Q 8 h 1 month (minimum) azithromycin 25 mg/kg Po Q 24 h 1 month (minimum) Ceftriaxone 25 mg/kg iV Q 24 h 1 month (minimum) TVP_2014-0506_12-13_News.indd 12 5/24/2014 10:34:51 AM

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