Maddie and Rosie DeVoll are lucky Lemurs. They are a small part of Barry DeVoll’s family of exotic animals. Barry grew up in Cedar Falls and knew early on that he was a hands-on learner and he wanted to provide opportunities for other kids to explore and learn in tangible ways. He started with magic and animal shows as a young entrepreneur and those shows have blossomed into an educational show that travels nationwide. “Bixby and Friends” is a show that teaches families about conservation and how to best take care of the world that we live in.
Maddie was Barry’s first ring tailed lemur. She is 5 years old and just had her first baby, Rosie who is almost 2 months old. While lemurs are cute and social animals, they do not make good pets. After the age of 2, lemurs reach full maturity and their behavior becomes more unpredictable. In order to keep the animal handlers and the audience safe, Maddie is retired and lives a comfortable life in an animal sanctuary. Lemurs are very social animals, and have some human characteristics. They live in groups (called Troups) of 30-60 lemurs. They are adventurous and brave and also affectionate with other lemurs. They eat “monkey biscuits” (a prepared dry food with protein and vitamins) and many fruits such as bananas, papayas, star fruit, apples, strawberries but don’t really like vegetables. For treats they like to eat fruit loops, and fruit snacks.
Bixby’s Rainforest Rescue show can be seen every day this summer at Adventureland. There will be an 8 foot Burmese python, a green winged Macaw, and a kinkajou in addition to a ring tailed lemur that will bring the rainforest alive for the audience. If you get a chance, stop by this summer to see some of these amazing animals and learn how to best take care of our world.
Wednesday, June 1, 2011
Monday, May 16, 2011
Do you know the 10 signs of sickness in cats?
Signs of illness may be not readily apparent in cats, says Susan Little, DVM, DABVP. Dr. Little says that one reason cats are not being brought in for veterinary visits as often as they should be is that pet owners don't always know their cats are sick.
Clients should look for these 10 subtle signs of sickness in their cats:
1. Inappropriate elimination
2. Changes in interaction
3. Changes in activity
4. Changes in sleeping habits
5. Changes in food and water consumption
6. Unexplained weight loss or gain
7. Changes in grooming
8. Signs of stress
9. Changes in vocalization
10. Bad breath
If you have seen any of these signs in your cats - call today to talk with your vet! We want your cats healthy and happy.
Taken from May 6, 2011 issue of VETERINARY MEDICINE
Clients should look for these 10 subtle signs of sickness in their cats:
1. Inappropriate elimination
2. Changes in interaction
3. Changes in activity
4. Changes in sleeping habits
5. Changes in food and water consumption
6. Unexplained weight loss or gain
7. Changes in grooming
8. Signs of stress
9. Changes in vocalization
10. Bad breath
If you have seen any of these signs in your cats - call today to talk with your vet! We want your cats healthy and happy.
Taken from May 6, 2011 issue of VETERINARY MEDICINE
Thursday, May 5, 2011
What Vaccine Refusal Really Costs: Measles in Arizona
This article taken from Maryn McKenna is a journalist for national magazines and the author of SUPERBUG and BEATING BACK THE DEVIL.
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/04/cost-vaccine-refusal/
Here’s one reason why: Measles transmission within the US stopped in 2000 because of vaccination. Outbreaks here start with an importation from somewhere else where the disease still flourishes — but they gain a foothold because lack of vaccination, primarily from vaccine refusal, lets the disease get past what should be an impregnable barrier of herd immunity to attack those who are too young to be vaccinated or whose immunity has faded.
Here’s another reason: Stopping the measles virus before it can cause serious disease — and by “serious,” I mean deafness, pneumonia, encephalitis and miscarriage — is incredibly costly and labor-intensive. An account published overnight in the Journal of Infectious Diseases gives a glimpse at just how costly. To stop a 14-person outbreak that began with one unvaccinated tourist visiting a US emergency room, the Arizona Department of Health had to track down and interview 8,321 people; seven Tucson hospitals had to furlough staff members for a combined 15,120 work-hours; and two hospitals where patients were admitted spent $799,136 to contain the disease.
Here’s how the outbreak unfolded:
In February 2008, a 37-year-old Swiss woman who had never been vaccinated against measles arrived in Tucson after a visit to Mexico. She developed breathing problems and a rash and went to a local hospital’s emergency room. They suspected she had a viral illness and admitted her.
Here’s what you have to know, to understand what happened next. Measles is extremely contagious; up to 90 percent of unvaccinated people who are exposed to it will get it. And if someone nearby has it, you will get exposed — because coughed-out measles virus can travel across a room, and hangs in the air for hours. The best protection against spreading measles in a hospital is putting someone in a negative-pressure isolation room, which is engineered so no air can leak out into the rest of the hospital. It took two days to get the Swiss tourist into isolation, because measles is rare enough in the US that it was not the hospital personnel’s first thought.
Meanwhile:
A 50-year-old woman who had spent an hour in the ER at the same time as the Swiss woman caught the disease from her. Patient 2 got taken care of, went home, and started feeling feverish nine days later. She had difficulty breathing and thought at first she was having an asthma attack, so she went back to the hospital and was admitted for two days. That she had measles would not be discovered until six days after that.
While she was in the hospital, Patient 2 unknowingly infected a 41-year-old health care worker who took care of her — and who was scheduled to get a measles-vaccine booster shot that very day, because the hospital was also caring for the tourist. Patient 2 also passed measles to an unvaccinated 11-month-old boy who was in the same ER while she was waiting to get checked for asthma, and to two unvaccinated siblings — 3 and 5 years old — who were visiting their mother on the same hospital floor after Patient 2 was admitted.
Patient 3, the health-care worker, passed measles to a 47-year-old woman in her emergency department — who later ended up in an intensive care unit with measles pneumonia — and later to a 41-year-old man in his home. Patient 4, the toddler, gave the virus to an unvaccinated 1-year-old while they were both in the same pediatrician’s office. Five other people were infected somewhere in their everyday lives: a 2-year-old boy who had never been vaccinated and who also ended up in an ICU with seizures brought on by high fever; a 9-month-old and an 8-month-old, also unvaccinated; and two adults, 35 and 37, who might have gotten one dose as children, but had no documentation of receiving a second dose.
Those 14 are just the confirmed cases. In addition to them, there were 363 suspected ones, and today’s paper makes clear authorities believe there were more illnesses than they know. And for every known case, there were dozens or hundreds of exposed people who had to be checked: 145 passengers on the tourist’s flight from Mexico, 1,795 patients in the ER that treated Patient 2, 25 people who attended church with Patient 7, 10 kids in the same day care center as Patient 8.
There’s an important dimension to this outbreak that may not be evident at first. We tend to blame parents who hold their kids back from vaccination for breaches in the wall of herd immunity. But the people who were infected in this outbreak and shared responsibility for passing it on included adult health care workers who had never been vaccinated and who had missed or declined the chance to get booster shots. By doing that, they put their unknowing patients at risk — and infected, among others, someone with brain cancer and another person living with Down syndrome.
When the hospitals checked to see who among their staff wasn’t vaccinated, they found that 30 percent didn’t know or couldn’t prove it. The two hospitals where measles patients were cared for actually did blood tests on their staff, and found that 9 percent were non-immune: never-vaccinated, never-infected. If the hospitals had not acted to identify those employees and send them home or vaccinate them, they could have hosted a roaring epidemic that might have been impossible to contain.
We can argue endlessly, and do, about people who refuse vaccination for themselves or their children. Under law, they have the right to take that risk. But what this Arizona outbreak makes clear is how many more people are forced to assume that risk without being consulted: not only the infants, elderly and immune-compromised among those 8,321 people exposed in this outbreak, but the hospital shareholders and taxpayers who paid the bill for it to be contained. Until we start counting up those costs as well, we won’t achieve an honest accounting of vaccine refusal’s true price.
Cite: Chen SY, Anderson S, Kutty PK et al. Health Care–Associated Measles Outbreak in the United States After an Importation: Challenges and Economic Impact. J Infect Dis. (2011) AOP April 28, 2011. doi:10.1093/infdis/jir115
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/04/cost-vaccine-refusal/
Every once in a while, there’s news of a measles outbreak. On the surface, they don’t involve large numbers of cases — there’s one in Minneapolis right now that has racked up 21 cases so far — and so people seem to wonder why these outbreaks are such a big deal.
Here’s one reason why: Measles transmission within the US stopped in 2000 because of vaccination. Outbreaks here start with an importation from somewhere else where the disease still flourishes — but they gain a foothold because lack of vaccination, primarily from vaccine refusal, lets the disease get past what should be an impregnable barrier of herd immunity to attack those who are too young to be vaccinated or whose immunity has faded.
Here’s another reason: Stopping the measles virus before it can cause serious disease — and by “serious,” I mean deafness, pneumonia, encephalitis and miscarriage — is incredibly costly and labor-intensive. An account published overnight in the Journal of Infectious Diseases gives a glimpse at just how costly. To stop a 14-person outbreak that began with one unvaccinated tourist visiting a US emergency room, the Arizona Department of Health had to track down and interview 8,321 people; seven Tucson hospitals had to furlough staff members for a combined 15,120 work-hours; and two hospitals where patients were admitted spent $799,136 to contain the disease.
Here’s how the outbreak unfolded:
In February 2008, a 37-year-old Swiss woman who had never been vaccinated against measles arrived in Tucson after a visit to Mexico. She developed breathing problems and a rash and went to a local hospital’s emergency room. They suspected she had a viral illness and admitted her.
Here’s what you have to know, to understand what happened next. Measles is extremely contagious; up to 90 percent of unvaccinated people who are exposed to it will get it. And if someone nearby has it, you will get exposed — because coughed-out measles virus can travel across a room, and hangs in the air for hours. The best protection against spreading measles in a hospital is putting someone in a negative-pressure isolation room, which is engineered so no air can leak out into the rest of the hospital. It took two days to get the Swiss tourist into isolation, because measles is rare enough in the US that it was not the hospital personnel’s first thought.
Meanwhile:
A 50-year-old woman who had spent an hour in the ER at the same time as the Swiss woman caught the disease from her. Patient 2 got taken care of, went home, and started feeling feverish nine days later. She had difficulty breathing and thought at first she was having an asthma attack, so she went back to the hospital and was admitted for two days. That she had measles would not be discovered until six days after that.
While she was in the hospital, Patient 2 unknowingly infected a 41-year-old health care worker who took care of her — and who was scheduled to get a measles-vaccine booster shot that very day, because the hospital was also caring for the tourist. Patient 2 also passed measles to an unvaccinated 11-month-old boy who was in the same ER while she was waiting to get checked for asthma, and to two unvaccinated siblings — 3 and 5 years old — who were visiting their mother on the same hospital floor after Patient 2 was admitted.
Patient 3, the health-care worker, passed measles to a 47-year-old woman in her emergency department — who later ended up in an intensive care unit with measles pneumonia — and later to a 41-year-old man in his home. Patient 4, the toddler, gave the virus to an unvaccinated 1-year-old while they were both in the same pediatrician’s office. Five other people were infected somewhere in their everyday lives: a 2-year-old boy who had never been vaccinated and who also ended up in an ICU with seizures brought on by high fever; a 9-month-old and an 8-month-old, also unvaccinated; and two adults, 35 and 37, who might have gotten one dose as children, but had no documentation of receiving a second dose.
Those 14 are just the confirmed cases. In addition to them, there were 363 suspected ones, and today’s paper makes clear authorities believe there were more illnesses than they know. And for every known case, there were dozens or hundreds of exposed people who had to be checked: 145 passengers on the tourist’s flight from Mexico, 1,795 patients in the ER that treated Patient 2, 25 people who attended church with Patient 7, 10 kids in the same day care center as Patient 8.
There’s an important dimension to this outbreak that may not be evident at first. We tend to blame parents who hold their kids back from vaccination for breaches in the wall of herd immunity. But the people who were infected in this outbreak and shared responsibility for passing it on included adult health care workers who had never been vaccinated and who had missed or declined the chance to get booster shots. By doing that, they put their unknowing patients at risk — and infected, among others, someone with brain cancer and another person living with Down syndrome.
When the hospitals checked to see who among their staff wasn’t vaccinated, they found that 30 percent didn’t know or couldn’t prove it. The two hospitals where measles patients were cared for actually did blood tests on their staff, and found that 9 percent were non-immune: never-vaccinated, never-infected. If the hospitals had not acted to identify those employees and send them home or vaccinate them, they could have hosted a roaring epidemic that might have been impossible to contain.
We can argue endlessly, and do, about people who refuse vaccination for themselves or their children. Under law, they have the right to take that risk. But what this Arizona outbreak makes clear is how many more people are forced to assume that risk without being consulted: not only the infants, elderly and immune-compromised among those 8,321 people exposed in this outbreak, but the hospital shareholders and taxpayers who paid the bill for it to be contained. Until we start counting up those costs as well, we won’t achieve an honest accounting of vaccine refusal’s true price.
Cite: Chen SY, Anderson S, Kutty PK et al. Health Care–Associated Measles Outbreak in the United States After an Importation: Challenges and Economic Impact. J Infect Dis. (2011) AOP April 28, 2011. doi:10.1093/infdis/jir115
Monday, May 2, 2011
Pet of the Month - May 2011 - Missy Kelly
John and Linda Kelly have a passion for pets. They love both cats and dogs, but when their beloved beagle Kasi passed away, they quickly decided that they needed another small cuddler to help ease the pain. While at the dog show in Waterloo they met up with a breeder of small beagles and within two days were the proud parents of Missy who is also a beagle. Missy is now 6 ½ years old and an integral part of the Kelly family. She is a snuggler, and has to spend time with “Daddy” as soon as he comes home from work and showers him with kisses. She played with assorted toys until one day Linda bought a stuffed fox toy. “Foxy” instantly was the only toy that Missy would play with. She takes “Foxy” with her wherever she goes, uses her as a pillow, and cuddles her as if she was her baby. Missy has recently been on a bit of a diet, but loves carrots, sweet potato, red and green pepper, cabbage and the occasional bite of egg and toast.
Anyone who has dealt with the death of a pet knows the pain of loss. For John and Linda, Missy was the balm to ease that pain and bring joy back into the Kelly family.
Anyone who has dealt with the death of a pet knows the pain of loss. For John and Linda, Missy was the balm to ease that pain and bring joy back into the Kelly family.
Friday, April 1, 2011
Pet of the Month - April 2011 - Shiloh Schnackenberg
Shiloh Schnackenberg is a Pembroke Welsh Corgi and "daughter" to Mark and Melissa Schnackenberg. She is 4 1/2 years old. She was adopted from a local pet store. Being the dog of a meteorologist, she was introduced on the news because we wanted the viewer's help in naming her. We had many options from viewers like Puddles and Radar, but the one we loved most was, of course, Shiloh. Her favorite thing to do is chase our two cats and any poor squirrel that ends up on our deck. She loves to run. Our house is her own personal raceway daily as she runs laps through each room. Her favorite treat are mini marshmallows. She is a really wonderful little dog. :)
Monday, March 14, 2011
Baby Chick and Duckling Safety Tips
Salmonella bacteria are a common cause of foodborne illness, but can also be spread to people by direct contact with animals that carry the bacteria, such as reptiles and birds. Children can be at particular risk from these birds, since they are less likely to wash their hands and have more frequent hand-to-mouth contact than adults. Outbreaks of Salmonella infections have been linked to exposure to baby chicks and ducklings, and many of these outbreaks have occurred in the spring, around Easter.
Here are some important tips for parents and child care providers to reduce the exposure of young children to Salmonella from chicks and ducklings.
· Do not let children younger than five years of age handle baby chicks, other young birds, or items contaminated by the poultry.
· Wash your hands thoroughly after handling poultry or their droppings. Pacifiers, toys, bottles or other objects should not touch the baby birds or their cages. If these objects become contaminated, wash them with warm soapy water.
· Do not eat or drink around poultry or their living areas.
· Keep the bird area separate from areas where food and drink are prepared or consumed. Do not allow chicks or ducklings on table surfaces or places where food will be prepared or eaten. Do not wash the birds’ food and water dishes in the kitchen sink.
For more information, visit http://www.cdc.gov/healthypets/easter_chicks.htm
Taken from Iowa Department of Public Health - EPI Update
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
Pet of the Month - March 2011 - Whiskey Dunakey
Whiskey was found while Barb Dunakey was scrolling through PetFinder, looking at pictures and descriptions of Shelties available for adoption, when I came across a photo of a little guy listed with a rescue in the Minneapolis area. His story and his picture captured my heart, within a few days we were approved to adopt, and we headed up to visit 'Tate' to see if he was the one for us.
We'd found out that 'Tate' was a dog originally from Iowa, saved by an individual rescue person at a Midwest Auction - more than likely a puppymill dog - and relocated to a caring organization in the suburbs of Minneapolis. They told us 'he was the most disengaged dog from human interaction' they'd ever taken in to their rescue. For the first month he wouldn't even look at them, and it was apparent he hadn't been given any love or affection in his nearly 2 years of life.
When we went to visit, he'd been with them for over 2 months and we were the FIRST potential adopters he even allowed to approach. Anyone else who had come to see him hadn't been able to get close to him as he would run in fear from corner to corner trying to get away. He allowed my husband to approach him in the corner, and his rescurer was amazed that my husband was able to pet him and talk to him. Shortly thereafter, he allowed me to approach and talk softly to him while I petted him as well. It was apparent this little guy had led a traumatic life. Encouraged by the fact that he appeared to like us as much as he was capable, we happily adopted him and brought him home to be a part of our family.
From his arrival home on 8/21/10 until Thanksgiving weekend, he never made a single peep - not even a sigh or a yawn, let alone a bark; however, he did bark playfully at our Granddogs when they were here to visit during the holidays. He has made progress with tiny baby steps towards becoming a more normal, happy dog in the 5 1/2 months we've had him, but he has a long ways to go yet. His past life has left him highly stressed, and he appears to suffer a bit from OCD tendancies as well, but he's learning to trust and is coming out of his shell little by little.
Our little Whiskey is a beautiful Color-headed White/ Blue Merle purebred Sheltie with one blue eye and one brown, and weighs just under 15 pounds. We love him to death and can hardly wait for the time when he feels safe and secure with us! When that finally happens, we know he'll be a happy, content boy in his furrever home and we'll spoil him as much as he'll let us!!
We'd found out that 'Tate' was a dog originally from Iowa, saved by an individual rescue person at a Midwest Auction - more than likely a puppymill dog - and relocated to a caring organization in the suburbs of Minneapolis. They told us 'he was the most disengaged dog from human interaction' they'd ever taken in to their rescue. For the first month he wouldn't even look at them, and it was apparent he hadn't been given any love or affection in his nearly 2 years of life.
When we went to visit, he'd been with them for over 2 months and we were the FIRST potential adopters he even allowed to approach. Anyone else who had come to see him hadn't been able to get close to him as he would run in fear from corner to corner trying to get away. He allowed my husband to approach him in the corner, and his rescurer was amazed that my husband was able to pet him and talk to him. Shortly thereafter, he allowed me to approach and talk softly to him while I petted him as well. It was apparent this little guy had led a traumatic life. Encouraged by the fact that he appeared to like us as much as he was capable, we happily adopted him and brought him home to be a part of our family.
From his arrival home on 8/21/10 until Thanksgiving weekend, he never made a single peep - not even a sigh or a yawn, let alone a bark; however, he did bark playfully at our Granddogs when they were here to visit during the holidays. He has made progress with tiny baby steps towards becoming a more normal, happy dog in the 5 1/2 months we've had him, but he has a long ways to go yet. His past life has left him highly stressed, and he appears to suffer a bit from OCD tendancies as well, but he's learning to trust and is coming out of his shell little by little.
Our little Whiskey is a beautiful Color-headed White/ Blue Merle purebred Sheltie with one blue eye and one brown, and weighs just under 15 pounds. We love him to death and can hardly wait for the time when he feels safe and secure with us! When that finally happens, we know he'll be a happy, content boy in his furrever home and we'll spoil him as much as he'll let us!!
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