Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Should Canada Allow Contraceptives For Dogs And Cats? Yes, Says One Vet

The Canadian Press , 12 Oct, 2014 05:54 PM
    TORONTO - One day, sterilizing your pet could be as simple as taking them to the vet for their annual shots.
     
    For Dr. Judith Samson-French — who jokingly calls herself "the queen of contraception" — a less-invasive alternative to putting Felix or Fido under the knife should be an option that any veterinarian in Canada could offer.
     
    Contraceptives for cats and dogs are not commercially available in Canada, but Samson-French has special access to one drug for a project aimed at controlling stray dog populations in remote First Nations communities.
     
    The vet from Bragg Creek, Alta., injects a contraceptive implant — about the size of a grain of rice — and a microchip to track the dog.
     
    Deslorelin, which she has access to through an emergency drug release, costs $55 and has been found to last over a year with no side effects, she said.
     
    So far, about 300 dogs in four communities, three in Alberta and one in Labrador, have been treated, said Samson-French. There are plans for similar projects in British Columbia, Manitoba and Nunavut.
     
    An alternative to surgery is needed because it's difficult to provide veterinary care in remote areas for free-roaming dogs, she said.
     
    They can also pose a danger to children. Two girls were mauled to death by wild dogs in Manitoba this year. 
     
    Samson-French said the drug is commercially available in Europe, Australia and New Zealand, but not in North America.
     
    "I would love to have that available in private practice for dogs," she said.
     
    In Europe, non-permanent contraceptives are used on female show dogs, said Samson-French. It stops them from going into heat during competitions, but they can still be bred after they earn their qualifications.
     
    It may be expensive for a company to try to get the drug approved in Canada, but it's already been tested in the field and "works beautifully," she said.
     
    Deslorelin suppresses the production of reproductive hormones, said Joyce Briggs, president of the U.S.-based Alliance for Contraception in Cats and Dogs.
     
    There's also work being done on developing a vaccine which would trigger an immune response against the gonadotropin-releasing hormone — what she calls the "master hormone" — which puts the whole reproductive cycle in motion.
     
    Zeuterin, which sterilizes dogs when injected into the testicles, is available in the United States. Samson-French said a drug called GonaCon is showing promise as a contraceptive for cats.
     
    "We're looking at health care for animals that is following the progress of health care for people, and we certainly wouldn't think about managing population with an ovarian hysterectomy for women and castration for men," Briggs said in an interview from Portland, Ore.
     
    Many pet owners would likely welcome a less invasive option to surgery if they had any inkling that there was another option that was less invasive, she said.
     
    She still believes that pets should be spayed and neutered and volunteers with a group in the Portland area that provides thousands of cat spays for low-income families.
     
    "I'm very much an advocate for it. But I'll tell you, when I'm about to take my own animals in for the surgery, I always feel bad for them," Briggs said.
     
    "And if there was an alternative where I could bring them in, have them not go under anaesthesia and just get a shot, I think that would be great."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Whales grace B.C.'s marine mammal riches

    Whales grace B.C.'s marine mammal riches
    VICTORIA - Whale research in British Columbia has come a long way from the days when the Department of Fisheries and Oceans mounted a 50-calibre machine gun at Seymour Narrows north of Campbell River with the aim of shooting Killer whales to save more salmon for anglers.

    Whales grace B.C.'s marine mammal riches

    BCIT celebrates 50-year anniversary starting with 'Fab 50' event at first campus

    BCIT celebrates 50-year anniversary starting with 'Fab 50' event at first campus
    BURNABY, B.C. - It's been 50 years since then-premier W.A.C. Bennett officially opened the doors of the B.C. Institute of Technology in Burnaby, and that milestone is being celebrated at the school that now has five campuses.

    BCIT celebrates 50-year anniversary starting with 'Fab 50' event at first campus

    Government should do more to help Canada's troubled police officers

    Government should do more to help Canada's troubled police officers
    TORONTO - Some recent suicides among Canada's police officers have mental health advocates redoubling calls for more aggressive government action and greater public sympathy for the emotional well-being of law enforcement professionals.

    Government should do more to help Canada's troubled police officers

    Call growing louder for national prescription drug plan in Canada

    Call growing louder for national prescription drug plan in Canada
    OTTAWA - It's a buzzword in the medical community, although one that hasn't quite caught fire yet with Canadians at large: pharmacare, a national program that would see prescription drugs covered through a publicly funded system rather than out of pocket.

    Call growing louder for national prescription drug plan in Canada

    Rob Ford to return to hospital Tuesday for second round of chemotherapy

    Rob Ford to return to hospital Tuesday for second round of chemotherapy
    TORONTO - Rob Ford's brother says the ailing Toronto mayor will begin a second round of chemotherapy on Tuesday. Doug Ford says he will back in hospital then for the cancer treatment.

    Rob Ford to return to hospital Tuesday for second round of chemotherapy

    Vancouver Fire Crews Battle Large Blaze At Granville Gardens Building

    Vancouver Fire Crews Battle Large Blaze At Granville Gardens Building
    VANCOUVER - Vancouver's assistant fire chief says it's too early to confirm whether a blaze that ripped through an unoccupied assisted-living facility was suspicious.

    Vancouver Fire Crews Battle Large Blaze At Granville Gardens Building