Animal Welfare Professionals

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  • 1.  Heartworm prevention awareness tools?

    Posted 07-04-2023 07:21 AM

    Hi all~ 

    I'm with a breed-specific rescue group in Texas. 

    For our adoption applicants, we want to confirm a stable history of heartworm prevention with their current/past dogs. However, we're shocked by the number of dog owners who don't think it's necessary at all or  only protect their dogs sporadically.

    We regularly try to push out reminders to help educate our social media followers.~ e.g., a photo of a heart filled with worms. ((BARF... but it works)) or documenting our own foster dogs who have to endure heartworm treatment. We also have pulled content from American Heartworm Society.

    What other tools, graphics, resources, etc., can we use to help raise awareness of this topic?

    Thanks for your help!

    P.S. Looking forward to meeting some of you at the Best Friends conference in Houston next month! 


    #MarketingandSocialMedia

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    Deirdre Jack
    Lone Star Bulldog Club Rescue
    dfwbulldogrescue.org


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  • 2.  RE: Heartworm prevention awareness tools?

    Posted 07-05-2023 08:24 AM

    I worked at a shelter for 12 years and a vet clinic for 10. One of the best things I found to get people to start preventatives was talking about the cost difference between the preventatives vs. the treatment. Plus there's the fact that if your pet gets heartworm they will die from it if left untreated. And if you do the treatment there's a chance they could die anyway.  Compared to the cost and risk of treatment, monthly preventatives seem like the obvious choice. 



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    Marilyn Wheaton
    Client Services
    AnimalsFirst
    Leesburg VA
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  • 3.  RE: Heartworm prevention awareness tools?

    Posted 07-14-2023 05:57 AM

    Thanks, Marilyn! Do you have any social media graphics that you use for this purpose? If so, are you willing to share them to help stir our own creativity?



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    Deirdre Jack
    Lone Star Bulldog Club Rescue
    dfwbulldogrescue.org
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  • 4.  RE: Heartworm prevention awareness tools?

    Posted 07-17-2023 05:42 AM

    Unfortunately I didn't make any tangible materials at the time, I just knew the prices of treatment and preventatives at our local clinics. 



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    Marilyn Wheaton
    Client Services
    AnimalsFirst
    Leesburg VA
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  • 5.  RE: Heartworm prevention awareness tools?

    Posted 07-17-2023 08:13 AM

    Keeping the dog on HW prevention is in our adoption contract -- and their history of doing so is part of our pre-adoption vet reference check.  We talk about it during adoption.

    Aside from the cost of HW treatment, we also discuss how hard it is on the dog, and the fact that we've known several dogs who died during treatment, despite the vet doing everything right.    The fact that the dog has to survive three very expensive injections of an arsenic-based compound during treatment tends to sober people.  I also describe what it looks like when a dog goes Caval in end-stage HW disease -- it's a God-awful way for a dog to die.

    Even in the high-HW regions of the South, there is an economically disadvantaged population that thinks that "worms" are only "intestinal" worms, and doesn't understand that heartworms are not treated by giving the dog dewormer.   This requires education.   This population is likely to adopt through open-adoption shelters (municipal facilities) on low or no-fee weekends.  I used to volunteer at one of these facilities and had many such conversations.   Once educated, their biggest barrier is cost -- regular vet exam fees, heartworm test fees, vet clinic product mark-up.  They love their pets but don't have the money to go to a "regular" vet.    In some cases, even having a vehicle to take the dog to the annual exam is a challenge.   They are more likely to buy HW meds directly from the shelter than from a community vet,  and would be likely to be interested in generic ivermectin tablets that are very low cost (e.g., Iverhart, TriHeart Plus, etc.), esp. if offered by the shelter at the time of adoption.   I used to write down the names of the cheapest local "discount" vet clinics, the stores with low-cost pop-up vax weekends, and the websites where they could buy very cheap prevention -- having a handout would make a lot of sense!

    I've long thought that shelters serving economically challenged populations should get grants to wrap a year's supply of HW prevention into the the adoption -- and offer community vetting clinics for alumni if at all possible to help people access HW tests, vax boosters, and very low-cost prevention.   Low-cost annual clinics are essential for preserving access since HW meds are not OTC.

    In Northern areas, there is an opposite problem of affluent holistic-favoring adopters who are likely to adopt from breed rescues or shelters that do transports of dogs "with a story."   They're afraid of "putting poisons in the dog" with products from "big Pharma."   They need education on how much worse the arsenic-based HW treatment is as a "poison" than the low-dose preventions, as there is no viable holisitic HW prevention at this time. 



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    Maggie Thomas
    President
    Red Stick German Shepherd Rescue
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  • 6.  RE: Heartworm prevention awareness tools?

    Posted 07-17-2023 10:57 PM

    Has anyone heard of Generic heart worm meds ? I've been ordering from Joespetmeds for over a decade. Like $5/ pill and they have many different genetics. Hope this helps ! Xoxo



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    Angie Ali
    Founder
    Amanie K9
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  • 7.  RE: Heartworm prevention awareness tools?

    Posted 07-18-2023 02:51 PM

    Yep, several HW prevention products are "off patent" because they're older meds.  Ivermectin has had a slew of "off brand" options for many years.  Advantage Multi just went off patent last year, so there are now several off-brand options for it too.  The same is also true of Revolution.

    I am super-happy that you' ve had good results for over a decade with Joe's!  My vet definitely wouldn't want anything to do with us ordering foreign drugs for the rescue though.  Joe's is not based in the U.S.  The claim to be based in Australia.   I say "claim" because several foreign pet med vendors selling to the U.S. have been found to fronts for Chinese sellers....and it's really hard to track down.   An adopter sent me a website that looked like super-cheap pricing "from England" -- when I drilled down, I figured out that they using a UK PO box but not registered as a pharmacy with the UK government....and they goods drop-shipped from Asia.  That  likely means they're a Chinese outfit.

    My vet and I have an agreement that if she issues the script, I will always order U.S. FDA-approved meds through a Vet-VIPPS-certified online pharmacy (that ensures that you're getting the real-deal products manufactured to U.S. standards that are equivalent to the vet-sold ones) -- there've been A LOT of "failed prevention" products in the South, and the risk of an HW+ dog due to failed prevention is pretty scary.   She doesn't mind me saving money but she also doesn't want us ordering meds that aren't U.S. equivalents from foreign vendors whose sourcing is unknowable.

    For those in areas where ivermectin-based pills still work, there are many affordable US FDA-cleared generic alternatives to Heargard now:  TriHeart Plus and Iverhart are the most widely sold, but there are quite a few others.  Allivet.com sells the Triheart Plus pills for a great price --and it's totally legit (US meds, Vet-VIPPS certified).  The off-brand version of Advantage Multi that they sell is called Midamox, Revolt and Selarid are off-brand versions of Revolution.  They also frequently offer $5 coupon codes that bring it down even more.   Chewy and others may have different names for the "generic equalent" off-brands.

    ETA:  I just did some checking on Joe's, and per some reviews, they seem to be drop-shipping at least some orders to the U.S. from China.  :(



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    Maggie Thomas
    President
    Red Stick German Shepherd Rescue
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  • 8.  RE: Heartworm prevention awareness tools?

    Posted 02-04-2024 05:24 PM

    I would agree with some of the other comments. Doing a side by side cost comparison as well as just the long term impact it can have on a pets health even after treated. (enlarged heart etc?) I think its also helpful to include a link to low cost resources. The approach of educate and advocate generally creates more long term buy in than shame or scare. 



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    Leah Bocanegra
    Managing Director
    The Happy Pet Project
    TX
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