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New vet My friend is a vet in China, speaks Mandarin, Cantonese and some English, she understands more than she speaks. If you tell me what city or province you're in I can ask around for some recommendations and try and help you find an English speaking vet if you like.:animal-pa u can send me a private msg if that makes u fell more comfortable. I used to live in Asia and thus know the inconveniences of being an American pet owner in a foreign country. It took me about 4-5 different vets before I found the rt one. The only thing good about the vets in Asia are that they're much cheaper than the ones in America:D |
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These things are not government regulated. Ever wonder why the rendering plants won't let you come in? You don't even know what the heck your animals are eating when you buy commercial pet foods. How can anyone say pet food is better than real food? Where is it written? Maybe this is another good time to post this information. Closer Look At A Rendering Plant Dead Cats And Dogs Used To Make Pet Food The Dark Side of Recycling |
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do they have dermatologists there in china as i would think they would have specialists there as well if so i would just go to a dermatologist. The holistic vet we saw does chinese medicine and he was the one that put dd on revolution to rule out scabies here is the book he wrote Amazon.com: Healing Pets with Nature's Miracle Cures (9780970967848): Henry Pasternak: Books |
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foods pets die for and protect your pet- here is a link to them Amazon.com: foods pets die for: Books i have been a big chicken about home cooking myself and the most important thing is making sure bone meal (calcium) and multi vitamin there is another site by ucdavis although i am not 100% sold on it even though ucdavis is a vet school that specializes in animal nutrition www.balanaceit.com another person that many people have had great success with is susan davis and she does phone consults Holistic Veterinarian Pet Nutritionist Holistic Pet Care |
I think the OP stated she's feeding Purina supplemented with people foods. 60% Purina/40% other foods will provide enough nutrients and vitamins that additional supplementation shouldn't be needed. The OP stated too that the puppy was eating well and has since on some weight. |
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Also, you can see the difference in the current info floating around on scabies. Some are still following outdated methods and beliefs, and we each think our treatment is the most current, or most effective. This is how bad it is: My vet diagnosed scabies on me! My doctor just shrugged it off the week before! I called my MD back and told her my vet said def scabies, and she called in a script for me. I had it around my waist, about 3 inches long, 1 inch wide band. Itched profusely around 4 pm everyday, and it travelled around my waist twice before I went to the doctor. Tried Pine-Sol, Bleach (straight), and anything else I could get my hands on. Maybe there's slightly different strains, depending on where one lives, that respond differently. I remember getting it as a child, from pet hamsters and mice, who got it from overcrowded conditions in the pet stores. (This was a very, very long time ago) I have a large garden area in the yard now, and use minimal to none insecticide sprays (try to stay holistic/green for safety's sake) so all too often I come in with no-see-ums itchy things. I get in the shower, and I use cat flea/tick/lice shampoo all over for initial knockdown of the bugs (contains same strength or less active ingredient pymethrins and it much cheaper than script), and rinse followed by human coconut extract body wash (natural bug repellant). Didn't have these problems when I lived in the city... never even saw a flea! Reasoning behind this: I worked at a grooming salon as a bather for 5 months and had my hands in insectidal dog and cat shampoos from 9-5 with no known ill effects, so cat shampoo with natural pymethrins should be harmless too. Then we have the zebraskeeters (daytime black and white mosquitos) that carry West Nile Virus and/or Heartworm... and I witnessed a flock of them hovering near the tree (where my dogs hang out in the summertime) but this was winter, snow on the ground, 17 degrees Fahreinheit. Plus we live right off the Chesapeake Bay, so everything drains into it and we have to be very careful about that. Not to mention the Cuterebras... oh so nasty fly larvae. Normally deposited on rabbits and small mammals, the buttheads mistook my Yorkie 2 years in a row for a bunny. The flies don't bite, they just lay their eggs in fur, hatch out and follow the hair folicle up and burrow into the skin, then basically feed on the rabbit or dog from the inside out (usually just under the skin though). First time I reached up to pet my guy behind the ears and felt wetness: yuck. Turned on the light and saw blood and drainage: yuck. Found hole like an abcess... but no odor or puss, then saw worm like creature stick it's head out of the hole and ducked back in! Almost vomited on that one. Composed myself, found my forceps, and set about removing the beast, only to learn later at the vets that if they are crushed or broken during the removal process, they release toxins into your pet that can cause immediate, severe, acute anaphylactic shock and death!:eek: Good thing: wound heals up in days with no antibiotics required. How did I get here? IDK...Hope you feel better.... keep posting...give Uni hugs and kisses... I need sleep:p Say Hey! to loony mom! Old people need love too! |
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