Pet Owner Pays for Surgery With Help from Angel Fund
Late last fall, Maria Barraza noticed a lump on her dog’s right hip. “Blanca had an infection and I started feeling around and felt the lump. So I took her to a local veterinarian in Baldwin Park where I live,” she said.
“The doctor checked her and told me it looked like she had a tumor and that it might be cancer. That scared me. They gave me antibiotics for her infection and we got rid of it. But the doctor told me that her clinic didn’t do surgeries and that she would have to refer me to another hospital.”
The referral was to a hospital in North Hollywood, Maria said. The staff there treated her rudely, she said, and frightened Blanca, who ran out into a busy street. “That scared me,” she remembered. “I wasn’t happy and I wanted to take her somewhere else.”
One of the doctors she had seen told Maria about Huntington Pet Vet and Wellness Center in Huntington Beach and suggested she might be able to get help with her bill there. On the way to Huntington Beach, she noticed another lump on Blanca’s chest. When she arrived at the hospital, she told the staff member who picked the dog up at curbside to take her into the hospital about the new lump she had noticed.
Dr. Allison Naito examined Blanca and told her that Blanca, a poddle, was overweight and confirmed there were fatty lumps that should be removed. “But when I picked her up, I didn’t notice any stitches on her hip. When I called to ask about it, they told me that they had to take two lumps off her chest and that I should keep her on a diet and bring her in if the lump on her hip gets bigger.”
Dr. Naito recommended Angel Fund when Maria told her that’s she would need help to pay for the surgery. “I’m on a budget,” Maria said. “I was afraid of what the cost might be if Blanca had cancer. I was really depressed about it.”
The hospital staff helped her fill out the Angel Fund forms. She received a grant that was matched by the hospital, for which she was very grateful. She was also relieved when she was told that there was no cancer.
Blanca was one of a series of poddles Maria has owned, nearly all living until about age 16. “Three years ago, I had to put down Selena, my older dog, who was a black poddle, and it very hurting for me. I did not want to have to do that with Blanca when she was only 10 years old.”
Blanca is doing well now. She has recovered nicely from her surgery last December and Maria is careful about what she eats. “I avoid giving her fatty foods and snacks. She is eating better and seems to have more energy. I can’t walk her much because I have a bad back but I have a big backyard and she loves to run there. And my caretaker does take her for walks.”
She also said that the fatty tumor on Blanca’s hip is smaller now and she is now optimistic that her dog will make it to 16. She is grateful to Angel Fund and the hospital for the help they provided.
Two mountain lion kittens survived after wrenching Thousand Oaks rescue.
Two mountain lion kittens rescued in Thousand Oaks earlier this month moved into a new home at the Orange County Zoo this week.
Using Kinesiology Tape On Your Dog
FROM THE WHOLE DOG JOURNAL
Proponents say that kinesiology tape can help your dog recover from chronic and acute sports injuries. It’s not expensive to give it a try, so why not learn how?
Although there is lack of evidence, veterinarians, canine rehabilitation therapists, and canine massage therapists who routinely use kinesiology tape report that many of their patients improve as a result. Taping is easily incorporated into other hands-on treatments, most dogs quickly adapt to it, and it can be done at home by family members between treatment visits.
Cleaning Products You Should Never Use Around Your Pets
from MAIDS.COM
California Wildfire Safety Guide
If you’re a homeowner, it can be highly stressful if a wildfire begins and spreads to your general location or residence. Learn everything you need to know about wildfires and how to stay safe.
Owner Gives Up Pet to SPCA; Angel Fund Comes to Rescue
“I fell into a deep depression, coming home and seeing her not eating and getting weaker by the day,” Alex said.
“Oreo was urinating a lot,” his wife Rosalinda said. “I told Alex that I think she has a bladder infection or some other kind of infection. We took her to the animal hospital and the veterinarian told us she had stones in her bladder. “The surgery was really expensive and we just didn’t have any money.”
“Oreo was getting sicker and sicker and we just couldn’t see her like that,” Alex said. The couple decided to take the dog to the SPCA, hoping that the organization might be able to take care of her surgery and then find her a new home.
Alex, terribly depressed at the thought of giving up his dog, took a binder he had kept that had all Oreo’s health and other records. “The young lady there [at SPCA] told me, ‘Wow, she’s a well-loved dog! I‘ve never seen a binder like this.’
“I said, ‘Oh, I love her.’ I was crying when I handed her over.” Alex said. “I said I wanted to surrender the binder with Oreo. I thought the right thing to do was to surrender her so they could help her.”
Depressed and saddened, Alex and Rosalinda returned to their home in Hawthorne. The next day, the SPCA called them and suggested that they call the Animal Hospital of South Bay and ask about Angel Fund, Rosalinda said.
“They said Angel Fund could help us,” she said. “I talked to a lady at the hospital and she said, ‘OK, let me find out a few things.’ She called back later and said Oreo was scheduled for surgery that day. I said, ‘Wait, she’s at the SPCA.’ She said, ‘No, we picked her up. And Angel Fund is going to help you.’ That felt really good.”
When Alex returned home, Rosalinda told him that Oreo’s surgery had been scheduled and the hospital wanted to know if he would like to see her before the operation.
“I said, yeah! It was the happiest day of my life. It was better than anything in the world.”
At the hospital the reunion of man and dog was an emotional moment. “She jumped out of the lady’s arms and into my arms and she’s kissing me and licking me,” Alex said. “It was amazing, it was amazing! I’ll never forget how she looked at me and she was crying like a baby.” So was Alex.
“Angel Fund made a depressed person very, very happy,” Alex said. “If they didn’t do what they did, I told Rosalinda, I needed to check myself into the mental hospital and she asked why. I said, ‘Because I can’t live without Oreo. If she goes, I’m going to go. I can’t live without her.’ So Angel Fund actually saved two lives.
“I told my therapist that I was thinking about killing myself. I really, really did. I was very, very depressed without her.”
Alex has a learning disability and has been unable to read or write. He has been working hard to change that and now can read at a third-grade level. “My spelling is really bad but I can read signs and I am learning,” he said.
He has worked when family members have helped him find jobs. In one instance, he was fired from a job his brother had helped him find. His employer gave him written instructions and told him to read them so he would know what to do. When Alex said he couldn’t read the instructions, he was fired.
He is also diabetic. He credits his dog with saving his life when he fell into a diabetic coma in 2016. Oreo bit him hard enough to wake him up but not break his skin, he said.
“I was on the floor and I went into the kitchen to grab something to eat – a piece of candy or something. She was crying and pulling on my shirt. she knew that I was sick. she started nibbling on my ear.”
He finally reached up and found a donut and that helped get him back on track, he said.
He and Rosalinda live with his son, although they are now divorced. The son and Rosalinda are his caretakers, Alex said. Alex has his own bedroom and Rosalinda shares a room with his granddaughter. “We get along better than when we were married,” he said.
Oreo – a Chihuahua-Jack Russel mix – is doing very well, he said. “She’s terrific – running around, getting a little chubby. But she’s great.” The dog is now six years old.
Avoiding Pig Obesity
From Texas A&M University
The age-old saying “you are what you eat” is not an exception for our swine friends.
Benefits of Dogs for Cancer Patients
Whether the dog is a personal pet, a therapy or service animal or even a part of the medical research process, “man’s best friend” can make a difference in the lives of cancer patients.
A Great Resource for Mini and Micro Pig Information
Considering a mini or micro pig as a pet? You can be sure that a pig is the best pet for you by going to an excellent source of information is at www.minimicropigs.com !
Have fun reading about cute little piggies!
Fossilized Poop Shows How Ancient Dogs Adapted to People
From Scientific American