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RVNs help dogs lose 25 per cent of bodyweight
The competition takes place over six months alongside expert diet and exercise plans.

Pet weight loss competition announces this year’s winners
 
The PDSA Pet Fit Club competition has announced this year’s joint winners – ‘Borris’ the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel and ‘Sadie’ the Labrador.

Both pooches lost 25 per cent of their bodyweight and a combined 18.8kg; proportionate to the size of a beagle.

The competition takes place over six months with personalised, expert diet plans and exercise regimes devised by the charity’s veterinary surgeons and nurses.

Borris weighed 28kg before the competition – 85 per cent over a healthy weight for his breed. Now that he is a trimmer 20.9kg, his owner, Annmarie Formoy, states the best part about his lighter frame is that he now loves his walks and even runs again: “…the first time that I saw Borris taking his first few running steps, it made me want to cry, I was so happy. He hadn’t run in years!"

Formoy admits that “too many treats” caused Borris’ weight gain, as well as his fondness for eating; surreptitiously feasting on everything from Eater eggs to a pair of false teeth.

Sadie weighed-in at 42.2kg prior to her weight loss, and now stands at a healthier 31.5kg. Her owner, George Chaplin, blames her “unrelenting appetite” for her previous size, but is now delighted that, “She’s a totally different dog now and is so much happier.

“We go on two walks a day with a group of dog walkers. At the beginning of her diet she would waddle at the back of the group but now she bounds ahead and that’s great to see.”

Head nurse Louisa Carey from Margate PDSA Pet Clinic and veterinary nurse Kerry Griffith from Basildon PDSA Pet Hospital oversaw Borris’ and Sadie’s successful weight loss plans respectively.

Launched in 2005, the Pet Fit Club has helped 85 dogs, 42 cats, eight rabbits and two rats shed over a combined 475kg.

Image (c) PDSA



 

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Reporting service for dead wild birds updated

News Story 1
 The Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) has updated its online reporting service for dead wild birds.

The new version allows those reporting a dead bird to drop a pin on a map when reporting the location. It also includes a wider range of wild bird species groups to select from when describing the bird.

The online service, which helps APHA to monitor the spread of diseases such as avian influenza, can be accessed here

Click here for more...
News Shorts
NI chief vet urges bluetongue vigilance

Northern Ireland's chief veterinary officer (CVO) has urged farmers to be vigilant for signs of bluetongue, after the Animal and Plant Health Agency warned there was a very high probability of further cases in Great Britain.

There have been 126 confirmed cases of bluetongue virus serotype 3 in England since November 2023, with no cases reported in Northern Ireland. The movement of live ruminants from Great Britain to Northern Ireland is currently suspended.

According to the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA), the virus is most likely to enter Northern Ireland through infected animals or germplasm (semen or ova) being imported.

Brian Dooher, Northern Ireland's CVO, said: "Surveillance for this disease within Northern Ireland has been increased to assist with detection at the earliest opportunity which will facilitate more effective control measures."

Farmers should report any suspicions of the disease to their private veterinary practitioner, the DAERA Helpline on 0300 200 7840 or their local DAERA Direct Veterinary Office.