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Open Thursdays and Fridays
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8:00am - 5:00pm (no appointments)
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SURGERIES:
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Drop off 8:00am - 10:00am
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Pick up: 3:00pm - 4:30pm
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VACCINATIONS:
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All day: 8:00am - 5:00pm
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HEALTH CLINIC:
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1:00pm - 5:00pm
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WE NOW DO DENTALS $125.00 for a routine cleaning THESE MUST BE SCHEDULED.
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VACCINE CLINICS
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Zelda's Pet Grooming
4:00 PM - 5:30 PM
CLOSED DECEMBER
LAST TUESDAY of every month
360 South Grand Avenue Pullman, WA 509-334-7280
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Spay Neuter Clinic
8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Thursdays and Fridays
1420 S. Blaine, Moscow.
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Spay-Neuter |
FINANCIAL
ASSISTANCE
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Spay Neuter Clinic of Moscow, (208)301-2790, is offering financial assistance to get your dog FIXED.
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Call Dr. Faulkner for more information at 208-882-2584 or stop by the clinic at the eastside marketplace on Thursday or Friday from 8-5.
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7th Annual Wrestling Vaccination Clinic Fundraiser Saturday, January 28, 2012 Moscow Jr. High 9 - 1p.m.
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Vaccines
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$15.00 |
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Dewormers
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$15.00 |
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Microchips |
$20.00 |
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Proceeds benefit the Spay Neuter Clinic.
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Bring your healthy dogs on a leash. Bring your healthy cats in a secure carrier.
These clinics benefit the Spay Neuter Clinic, providing surgeries to prevent the birth of pets in our over populated community
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FOR OWNERS OF FEMALE PETS:
There are two ways to spay female pets. Ovariectomy OVE (removal of the ovaries) and the traditional
Ovariohysterectomy OVH (removal of the uterus and ovaries). The Spay Neuter Clinic has chosen to perform
Ovariectomies on young healthy female dogs and cats. Over the past decade more and more veterinarians are
transitioning to OVE’s.
OVH (traditional) is technically more complicated, time consuming, and associated with greater morbidity (larger
incision, more intraoperative trauma, increased discomfort) compared with OVE. No significant differences between
techniques have been observed for incidence of long-term urogenital problems, including endometritis/pyometra and
urinary incontinence,. Canine OVE can replace OVH as the procedure of choice for routine SPAYING of healthy female
dogs and cats.
YOU AND YOUR VETERINARIAN MUST BE AWARE THAT if your pet receives exogenous (not from body itself) hormones
(progesterone) she may be prone to cystic endometrial hyperplasia . The risk of uterine cancer is extremely low,
and therefore does not warrant performing a potentially more traumatizing surgical procedure (OVH) that might be
associated with more postoperative complications.
For further information: http://www.buiatriaecuador.org/memorias/farmacologia/images/memorias/02_ovarioectomy.pdf
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THERE IS A NATIONAL CONSENSUS
Fundamental to all preventative work is sterilization. Neutering is recognized as our best defense against all sources of shelter overpopulation and suffering due to homelessness.
The solution to the stray, abandoned, and unwanted companion animal dilemma is this: Only by implementing widespread sterilization programs, only by spaying and neutering all companion animals, will we get a handle on pet overpopulation.
OUR PLAN
The solution has been identified, spay/neuter. To address this epidemic the Spay Neuter Clinic in Moscow has joined the national effort supported by ASPCA, Humane Society of the United States, American Humane Association, United Animal Nation and the Humane Alliance. Providing low cost, easily accessible spay/neuter services for pets in our community.
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THE CHALLENGE: IMPLEMENTATION
The fact is - There is not enough room in our animal shelters and humane societies for all the stray, sick and injured animals that need care. If you have ever been turned down when you've tried to deliver a pet to an animal shelter, then you understand the need to aggressively address pet population control. Our animal shelters are providing a much needed service of caring for and finding homes for displaced and stray pets. But there is a limited amount of room in which to provide quality care, limited amount of available money and limited number of available adopters. One stray male can fertilize as many females as he can gain access to each and every day he roams. Ask yourself what happens to all those litters? Their demise is not pleasant and does NOT need to take place. It's been documented over and over that caretakers, regardless of income level are resistant to spend money on multiple pets for a surgery they perceive as elective.
We definitely need to continue our combined efforts to educate people, but in the meantime clinics like ours need to provide services to help stem the growing reproductive problems in our local communities.
In this country, we spend a minimum of one billion dollars annually to pick-up, house, and destroy companion animals. If only 5% of that one billion were allocated to spay/neuter, we could open clinics across the nation, and sterilize more than four million companion animals every year. This necessary next step would end euthanasia as the current solution to the pet overpopulation dilemma.
National humane organizations have joined forces to address a national epidemic; "There is no disease or condition of companion animals that takes as many of their lives as euthanasia", Janet M. Scarlett, DVM, Associate Professor Of Epidemiology at Cornell University. . Clearly, our nation's best defense against all of the sources of shelter intake is accessible, low-cost sterilization. This is an urgent need.
OUR MISSION
To provide high quality, low cost spay/neuter services as a non lethal solution to the companion pet over population dilemma.
VISION
A time when every pet born has a family ready to love and care for them.
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Please adopt your pet from an animal shelter or pet rescue.
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Petfinder
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