Treat your animals for ticks! Please!
Treat your animals for ticks! Please!
October is spring, summer is around the corner and for pets and their owners that means: - tick season. Ticks are horrible little parasites that can transmit several serious diseases to dogs and cats, and even humans. Ticks are rife in long grass or wild areas, and so a particular concern for pet owners who walk their dogs on the mountain, in parks and open areas, or for dogs that roam in bushy areas around their homes. TEARS Animal Rescue recently saved a little dog that almost died from being bitten by ticks.
If you can afford it, the best treatment is tick control medication available at your vet. If not, you can you approach your nearest animal welfare organisation, like TEARS, and get your pets treated to prevent them getting sick from tick bites. Unfortunately, some home remedies that people believe will keep ticks away can be very harmful for your pets and don’t work at all. TEARS Animal Rescue Spokesperson, Tinka Shapiro, says, “Please don’t try anything that could hurt your dog or cat. We have seen some cases where petrol or motor oil has been used as tick prevention as the owners believed this would work. It does not work and it will only hurt your pet,” she explains.
On top of getting your dog tick control medication, you can also do a daily check to make sure there are no ticks on your pets or in their beds. Focus on their ears, neck, underbelly and between their toes when you are looking for the small brown arachnid. It is a good idea to treat your pets’ bedding and kennels with tick control products and wash their bedding every week, especially during spring and summer as ticks are more active in the warmer months.
Ticks can cause a few serious diseases; here are some of them with their symptoms:
- Babesiosis known as biliary (fever, anaemia, jaundice, lethargy)
- Ehrlichiosis (fever, bleeding, weight loss, eye issues)
- Anaplasmosis (joint pain, fever, lethargy)
- Tick paralysis (weakness or paralysis)
- Haemobartonellosis (anaemia, lethargy in cats, pale gums)
Meisie is the little dog that got very ill with ehrlichia, a tick-borne bacterial infection. She got so sick that she nearly died. She was handed into the Hermanus Animal Welfare and then sent onto TEARS Animal Rescue as she had been exposed to Parvo, a highly contagious and potentially fatal viral disease that affects unvaccinated dogs.
Meisie became lethargic and her belly was very swollen despite her body being skeletally thin: the symptoms of ehrlichia.
Shapiro explains,
“Meisie’s liver was failing due to the fluid build-up in her abdomen. We did a blood test to diagnose the ehrlichia and started to treat poor Meisie. There was a time we were not sure she would make it,”
she says Shapiro,
“but she did!"
“To make things even better, Meisie was fostered by a staff member and then adopted earlier this week. We are so happy that she now has a lovely place to call home,”
says Shapiro.
Bring your pets to TEARS Animal Rescue or your closest welfare organisation to have them treated with tick control medication or visit your nearest vet.
TEARS website: www.tears.org.za
TEARS Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/TEARSAnimalRescue/
TEARS Instagram page: https://www.instagram.com/tearsanimalrescue/?hl=en.
ABOUT TEARS ANIMAL RESCUE:
TEARS is a pro-life, non-profit organisation established in 1999 (registered in terms of Section 18A of the Income Tax Act) whose core aim is to rescue, treat, rehabilitate, reunite, and rehome lost, abandoned, abused, and neglected companion animals and to educate pet owners and the youth living in the four under-resourced communities within which we operate.
We strive to meet the needs of the under-resourced communities in the Southern Peninsula by providing:
● free sterilisations and subsidised medical support that includes vaccinations, deworming, and parasite control
● access to two TEARS mobile clinics that offer primary healthcare and pet care support.
● Access to the TEARS Veterinary Clinic, offering veterinary care for vulnerable pets for almost any condition, illness, or injury at a welfare rate.
TEARS remains the only facility in the Cape Peninsula’s far South available seven days per week, including an after-hours mobile clinic service from 4.30pm to 7pm with limited veterinary care. TEARS treat the hundreds of animals who need treatment each month for various conditions, illnesses, and injuries.
Our experience enables us to manage the population control of companion animals in these areas, based on available funding, and to reduce the spread of zoonoses as a means of supporting community health and complying to the WHO’s One Health approach to the animal-human interface.
We are partnered with community-based NGOs and community leaders to support vulnerable pets and pet owners living in the four core communities we are mandated to serve. Our Programmes aim to bring about systemic change through strategic interventions based on community involvement and support. Implementing effective animal welfare solutions in high-density and low-income communities has been proven to positively impact human welfare by delivering health, environmental, economic, educational, and social benefits.