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#34947 - 12/02/04 06:56 PM American Red Cross Pet First Aid
Craig Offline


Registered: 11/13/01
Posts: 1784
Loc: Collegeville, PA, USA
Late last March, my wife and I adopted an elderly toy "choodle" (poodle-chihuahua mix) from the local ASPCA. Peanut is now one of the joys of our lives.

We're taking her with us when we drive to Cincinnati to see my wife's parents for Christmas. Peanut is an old girl, no less than 10 years, probably more like 15, so we took a Pet First Aid course. We even have the wallet cards (now laminated) to prove it. Lessons learned:

(1) People don't really seem to care about learning first aid for their pets. We were two of THREE people in the class. They'd rather rush to the vet's and pay BIG money.

(2) People don't want to spend money to learn first aid for their pets. We paid $30 a pop. Acquaintances thought I was a sucker. Why would I take this course when I "could just call the vet."

(3) The Red Cross is losing money by hosting these courses. They may not continue. The contract instructor was paid more than we paid in fees. That is sad.

(4) I live in Mongomery County, PA. I had to go to the Berks County Chapter for this course. The reason? I couldn't get through to anyone at the Montgomery Chapter. Not by phone. Not by email.

The Montco chapter's web site is sad. Broken links and all. I resorted to calling fire stations and leaving messages for the training coordinators to call me back. Not one did.

I called Berks County and someone picked up the phone immediately. The Berks web site is well organized and I found what I was looking for in seconds.

The funny thing is, Montgomery County is the biggest county in PA. I thought its web presence would be well-funded and well-organized. I guess I thought wrong.

Has anyone else here taken Red Cross Pet First Aid?

-- Craig



Edited by Craig (12/02/04 07:08 PM)

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#34948 - 12/02/04 07:18 PM Re: American Red Cross Pet First Aid
GoatRider Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 08/28/04
Posts: 835
Loc: Maple Grove, MN
That sounds like a really good idea. I have a dog that's very important to me. She's very active, plays frisbee a lot, and I've taken her to Agility classes every week for most of her life, and been to several Agility competitions. I'd sure like to know what to do if she got hurt. I just looked on the website for my local red cross, St. Paul, and they had 2 classes this year- last one was 2 fricken days ago! They were held at the university's Animal Sciences building, so they probably know what they're talking about. I'll have to look for it next year.

Lots of pictures on my web site of her on my web site, just follow the link in my sig.
_________________________
- Benton

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#34949 - 12/02/04 07:28 PM Re: American Red Cross Pet First Aid
X-ray Dave Offline
Addict

Registered: 11/11/03
Posts: 572
Loc: Nevada
Red Cross has a good Pet 1st Aid book, when I volunteered with them I picked some up and gave them to everyone I knew with a dog/cat. The list of Pet FAK items is very good.

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#34950 - 12/02/04 07:32 PM Re: American Red Cross Pet First Aid
Craig Offline


Registered: 11/13/01
Posts: 1784
Loc: Collegeville, PA, USA
My main concern with Peanut is choking. The vet thinks Peanut is in remarkably good condition for how old she thinks the dog is -- except her teeth are in poor shape.

Dogs tend to "wolf" their food down anyway, so I wanted to know how to treat choking in small pets. Now I do. I followed the link, by the way. Very handsome dog.

-- Craig

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#34951 - 12/02/04 08:30 PM Re: American Red Cross Pet First Aid
norad45 Offline
Veteran

Registered: 07/01/04
Posts: 1506
As the proud owner of a new chocolate lab pup, I am extremely interested in the content of the class you took. Can you tell us what was taught? Would taking a class be that much more worthwhile than simply buying some written materials? My gut says yes but I would like to hear specifics. Aside from the fact a dog can't tell you where it hurts or what it's discomfort is, what are the main differences between canine and human "first aid"?

Thanks, Vince

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#34952 - 12/02/04 08:44 PM Re: American Red Cross Pet First Aid
Craig Offline


Registered: 11/13/01
Posts: 1784
Loc: Collegeville, PA, USA
That's the problem: They can't tell you what's wrong, so you have to make an intelligent guess based on how well you know your pet. What's your pet's basic heartbeat, for starters? What's their body temperature when they are healthy? You have to measure that rectally <img src="/images/graemlins/tongue.gif" alt="" /> . How many breaths per minute does he or she take at rest and during play? That kind of thing.

Here's the link for the specific course I took. It will tell you basically what is involved:

Pet First Aid Course Details

Here's a link to the Pet First Aid course as described by the American Red Cross:

Pet First Aid

This is what got me started searching for a local course.

I hope this helps somewhat.

-- Craig

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#34953 - 12/02/04 08:46 PM Re: American Red Cross Pet First Aid
Craig Offline


Registered: 11/13/01
Posts: 1784
Loc: Collegeville, PA, USA
What's the title? I wonder if that's the one we got at the course.

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#34954 - 12/02/04 10:03 PM Re: American Red Cross Pet First Aid
X-ray Dave Offline
Addict

Registered: 11/11/03
Posts: 572
Loc: Nevada
I'll check tonight, but I'm sure the ARC only has 1 Pet FA book. Call your local chapter or check their web site.
Dave

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#34955 - 12/02/04 10:11 PM Re: American Red Cross Pet First Aid
Polak187 Offline
Veteran

Registered: 05/23/02
Posts: 1403
Loc: Brooklyn, New York
I'm proud to say I did a CPR on a poodle (more for the peace of the owner than for any good) and gave oxygen via pediatric non rebreather to a mutt who had an allergic reaction and transported him to the vet. I also rescued a hawk in my local park.

But certainly I would love to learn more.

Matt
_________________________
Matt
http://brunerdog.tripod.com/survival/index.html

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#34956 - 12/02/04 10:18 PM Re: American Red Cross Pet First Aid
GoatRider Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 08/28/04
Posts: 835
Loc: Maple Grove, MN
Here's one tip you pet owners should all know about. Dogs communicate their feelings through smell. You have to be a dog to get the full nuances of the smells, and the best place is in the butt. A dog sniffing another dog's butt is basically asking "how are you doing?".

Humans can learn to recognize some of the smells, and without smelling a dog's butt. Oddly enough, the bad smells usually mean a bad mood, and the good smells mean a good mood, at least with my dog. Just pay attention to the smell of your dog at various times and you'll learn to recognize it. The most recognizable smells in my dog are the "fear" and "happy" smells. She gets the strongest "happy" smell when my wife is getting ready to take her for a run, and the "fear" smell I've noticed strongest when she's been attacked by another dog.

The point is, dogs really do communicate how they're feeling, we just don't know how to "listen".
_________________________
- Benton

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