Search Search Search Topic Adoption & Placement Relocation & Transport Foster Care Shelter Medicine Programs & Services (-) Intake & Preventive Care Specific Medical Conditions Foster Animal Health Care Cruelty & Disasters Animal Fighting Keeping Pets in Homes Toxicology & Poison Control Active FiltersIntake & Preventive Care Group 9 Clear All Infectious Disease Management in Animal Shelters Textbook Find up-to-date information about preventing, managing, and treating infectious diseases in cats, dogs, and exotic small companion mammals in animal shelters. Takin’ It To The Heart Part 1: Understanding Heartworm Disease in Shelter Animals Join as we discuss heartworm disease, including what we currently know about the best ways to prevent, diagnose and manage the disease. Takin’ It To The Heart Part 2: New Insights on Managing Heartworm Disease in Shelter Animals Understand how to best tackle common problems of heartworm disease in shelter animals with this informative webinar presented by Dr. Brian DiGangi. Personal Protective Equipment Posters and How-To Video These posters show each piece of personal protective equipment (PPE), how to put it on and take it off, and can be placed where infectious disease is present. Disease Outbreak Management 101 Learn how to have a coordinated response plan in place before an infectious disease outbreak happens. Feline Upper Respiratory Disease Basics Learn how to manage feline upper respiratory infection (URI) in a shelter setting. Vaccination in Shelter Animal Populations Check out these vaccination protocols for shelter animals, including frequency standards and how to vaccinate special populations. Animal Appetite Monitoring Form This form can help shelter staff monitor the appetites of individual animals. Ringworm Management for Animal Shelters Watch these 2 ringworm management videos to help you screen and test for this highly contagious fungus. Tips to Prevent and Manage Canine Parvovirus in the Shelter Here are tips, gathered into four categories, to help keep your population healthier when parvo is a concern. Pagination Current page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Next page next ›