2020
DOI: 10.21708/avb.2020.14.4.9409
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Epidemiological aspects of 306 emergency cases of small animals seen at a veterinary school hospital

Abstract: The deficiencies in the screening protocols and the paucity of epidemiological studies aimed at emergency care contribute to a generalist emergency approach, without focusing on the most common causes and injuries of emergency admissions in veterinary practice. Thus, we aimed to retrospectively study the epidemiological aspects of emergency cases in dogs and cats under routine care at a veterinary school hospital at University X over 24 months (June 2012–Jun… Show more

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“…1 Emergency admission data available for people and small animals help to shape the policies that determine staffing and training. [2][3][4] Emergency admissions represented approximately 15%-20% of the total equine hospital caseload seen in 1 study. 5 Data concerning variables that affect the number of daily admissions have been examined in both human and veterinary medicine.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…1 Emergency admission data available for people and small animals help to shape the policies that determine staffing and training. [2][3][4] Emergency admissions represented approximately 15%-20% of the total equine hospital caseload seen in 1 study. 5 Data concerning variables that affect the number of daily admissions have been examined in both human and veterinary medicine.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…As equine practices increasingly discuss the concept of shared emergency coverage and ways to retain practitioners in the profession, there is a critical need for more data characterizing admission trends in equine emergencies 1 . Emergency admission data available for people and small animals help to shape the policies that determine staffing and training 2–4 . Emergency admissions represented approximately 15%–20% of the total equine hospital caseload seen in 1 study 5 …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%