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Sunday, October 26, 2008

cropping ears,docking tails outlaw?



Headline: Veterinarians should vote to outlaw inhumane cosmetic
surgery on dogs

Author: Holly Cheever

Cosmetic surgeries on dogs - cropping ears and docking tails - may
soon be history in the United States

This month, the House of Delegates of the American Veterinary Medical
association, the largest such group in the world, will vote on whether
to adopt postion statements opposing these surgeries. The AVMA is
responding to the Association of Veterinarians for Animal Rights,
which submitted hundreds of petitions signed by veterinarians
nationwide asking it to oppose these practices to help guide the
conduct of verinarians on this ethical issue.

Many veterinarians already refuse to crop ears and dock tails, and
some are actively campaigning to stop these unnecessary and
disfiguring surgeries. These progressive veterinarians are following
the leard of British kennel clubs, which outlawed ear cropping a
century ago. Cosmetic tail docks were stopped in 1993 in Great
Britain, thanks to British veterinarians, and many other European
countires have enacted similar bans.

Many veterinarians and most humane groups want these practices
stopped for one simple reason: Canine ear crops and tail docks hurt.
Painful post-surgical healing follows ear cropping, and the process
of taping and retaping the pup's ears to a frame to force them to
stand erect can be agonizing to the recovering animal. Anesthesia to
prevent pain is rarely used for docking the tails of puppies only a
few days old.

The timing of ear crops is also controversial. The preferred age, 8
to 12 weeks, coincides with a period of development in which trauma
can have a strong psychological impact on the maturing pup.

Some veterinarians also object to the arbitrary removal of body parts
used for communication, balance and the expression of a host of canine
behavioral traits. Dogs "talk" to their human companions and each
other with their ears and tails. Why perform medically unnecessary
procedures that merely perpetuate the image of dogs as "fashion
statements?"

Not everyone is happy with the growing segment of the veterinary
profession that wants to stop these outdated practices. Some
purebred dog breeders believe that "their" breed will be ruined if it
does not maintain the image handed down by parent breed clubs decades
ago.

They also argue that cropping or docking provide health benefits,
namely saving a dog from having its tail damged and preventing ear
infections. These arguments hold little water. If they did,
veterinarians would crop the ears of cocker spaniels and poodles, and
no dogs would have tails.

Debate over the issue churns within the AVMA's committees. The
association currently has no position statement on canine tail
docking. Its position on ear cropping is vague and doesn not address
the veterinarians's conduct. Sadly, many veterinarians see nothing
wrong with mutilating an animal that does not need surgery, as long
as there is a guardian demanding it and willing to pay for it.

The American Kennel Club, whch could take a strong leadership role in
eliminating these painful procedures, has washed its hand of the whole
issue.

It is time for the AVMA to take a stand against ear cropping and tail
docking, regardless of fashion standards. The United States must join
other progressive countries in eliminating these anachronistic and
inhumane procedures. Surely, dogs deserve to be valued for their
wonderful inherent characteristics.

Bio:
Veterinarian Holly Cheever is a board member of the Association of
Veterinarians for Animal Rights, in Vacaville, Calif., and
spokeswoman for the campaign to end ear cropping and tail docking in
the United States. She wrote this for People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals.

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About Me

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duluth, minnesota, United States
I love the good and bad and the ugly because all experiences make us who we are and you are stronger for everything that you experience.
I have links,videos,information on fho surgery both pre and postop on my golden retriever Dakota. There's also links to other sites both informational and fun.

dr on video explaining who gets hip dysplasia,what is hip dysplasia,symptoms of hip dysplasia and the diagnosis of hip dysplasia

 

I'm not sure how your dog is doing right now, but I want to let you know that if he is clumsy,has a wobbly gait which means that he has a swish to his walk, walks with his head down alot (because he is walking on his front half)which my Dakota did. He had great muscle mass in the front half of him because of this,but very little in the back. Won't even attempt to jump up on your furniture, which is good but at the same time can show you that he doesn't want to use them back limbs.Goes to move your hand with his nose if you are trying to rub those back limbs in the hip joint area (because he is sore,so he is protecting them).sometimes they will literally stumble going up stairs etc.. Now I am not saying that this is definately hip dysplasia in your animal because i am no doctor but those are the things that went on with him and he had severe hip dysplasia.Just ideas,things to watch for and ask your vet about if you are noticing any of this in your animal... These are things that I noticed when we had Dakota. Now, it was a little different with him because he had just been neutered so we weren't sure if things were going on with that at first or something else was going on until a few weeks had passed by and he just wasn't healing like we thought he should be so we made him a vet appointment thank goodness. If you are here, I am assuming that the reason has to do with a possible surgery coming up and you want to learn more and make the right decision. I am so glad that you are doing this!! First of all make sure that you read on the choices of surgeries if you haven't talked to your vet on that yet. I am still worried that maybe the complete hip surgery may have been the way to go for him instead of the fho surgery. He is out of pain which was my goal of course and it will never come back so I am told. But, he has such a swish still when he walks and pretty clumsy still. I know it is early yet and hopefullly these things will still take care of themselves with time and muscle growth. Just something to think about if you have a larger dog like I do. Research,Research,Research you have one chance. Make sure that you make the right one for you and your loved pet.

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