Clinical

87 Articles

Fluid therapy: Determining routes and rates of fluid administration
A thin brown dog sits on a veterinary table with a syringe secured by a bandage on its right leg.

Clinical

Fluid therapy: Determining routes and rates of fluid administration

Fluid therapy is a common, but complex, treatment that must be administered with care and attention to detail. The 2024 AAHA Fluid Therapy Guidelines for Dogs and Cats can help veterinarians make empowered choices and provide their patients with top-notch care.

Preparing to Answer the Call
Volunteers treat animals during a disaster response

Clinical

Preparing to Answer the Call

With natural disasters increasing in frequency and intensity, veterinarians must be prepared to respond more than ever. From university-based emergency response teams to local volunteer corps, there are many ways veterinarian professionals are getting trained and involved to tend to animals in times of extreme distress.

Eliminating Rabies
child-at-Mission-Rabies-vaccination-event-in-Cambodia

Clinical

Eliminating Rabies

Though dog rabies is 100% preventable through vaccination, it still kills at least 59,000 people each year—including many children—almost entirely in Africa and Asia. Traveling overseas to help vaccinate dogs for rabies is a powerful way to help save the lives of humans and dogs as part of a global effort to eliminate rabies by 2030.

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