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Thank you for taking responsibility
to help control the pet population.
Pet Orphans offers LA City discount vouchers valued at $30 each, which are good at participating vets.
You must pay the difference of whatever this $30 voucher doesnt cover, whatever that may be. These
vouchers can only be issued to residents in LA City zip codes and are valid for 90 days once they have
been written. You are allowed 3 vouchers per year (one per animal). The rules have recently changed and
you can now use them for feral cats.
Please call Arlene at 818-901-0190, x101 or arlene@petorphans.org.
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Mike,
I just wanted to say thank you for helping me out with Maddy.
Again thank you,
Molly
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You can also contact LA Animal Services at 888/452/7381 or
www.LAanimalservices.com. They do not perform
the surgeries themselves, but they offer free sterilizations for qualifying residents through
its Spay Mobile program, its free certificate program, and its senior/disabled program. If you
are low-income, on a government assisted program, or 65 years of age or older, then the Department
may have programs to help you spay your pet for free.
Why Should You Spay/Neuter?
According to the American Humane Association, only one in 10 of the 30 million puppies
and kittens born annually find permanent homes. Approximately 35% of shelter
animals are adopted; the rest, some 6 to 8 million annually, are euthanized.
There are two main reasons for these tragic numbers:
1. Pet owners who do not sterilize their pet and contribute to wanton, ill-considered breeding
2. Pet owners who fail to make a lifetime commitment to their pets by training them or taking them with them
when they move.
What are the advantages to sterilizing
your pet? Female pets who are spayed are:
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Less likely to be aggressive
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Less likely to have heat cycles and soil carpets,
rugs, and furniture
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Less likely to have mammary tumors, uterine cancer,
breast cancer or ovarian cancer. Breast cancer is fatal in about 50% of dogs
and 90% of cats.
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Less likely to exhibit annoying heat behaviors such
as whining, crying, pacing, and frantic attempts to get outdoors.
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Less likely to develop pyometra, a condition where
the uterus becomes infected and swells with pus. The treatment for pyometra
requires overnight hospitalization, IV fluids, antibiotics and spaying the dog
to make the uterus shrink. This can be quite expensive and painful for the dog.
Male pets who are neutered are:
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Less likely to be aggressive
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Less likely to attract unneutered males during their
heat cycles who can spray urine around your home and yard.
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Less likely to be territorial and to roam to look for
a mate (80% of dogs hit by cars are unneutered males)
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Less likely to exhibit annoying mating behaviors such
as whining, crying, pacing, and frantic attempts to get outdoors.
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Less likely to mark your home and belongings
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Less likely to develop testicular cancer (the second
worst disease for male dogs) and less likely to develop prostate cancer
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More likely to be focused on their owner due to the
loss of an urge to mate, and more likely to focus on their owners and excel in
training.
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Spayed and neutered pets are, in general, healthier,
happier and easier to care for. You will save money in veterinary bills and in
licensing fees. You can have the surgery done very cheaply as well with the
assistance of the City of Los Angeles' Spay
Neuter Voucher program
Common myths about spaying and
neutering:
It will change my pet's personality. While sterilization has been shown to
reduce aggression, particularly in males, it will not significantly change your
pet's personality for the negative. If anything, pets who are sterilized tend
to make the best companion animals as they are more focused on their owners and
easier to train.
It will make my pet fat and lazy.
Pets become fat and lazy due to inactivity and owners who do not provide them
with enough exercise and/or too much food.
A neutered male won't protect me.
While aggressiveness can be reduced by neutering, the dog's instinct to be
protective of his family is not. While having a dog that is protective can be
considered a positive, having a dog that is protective AND aggressive is not,
and an invitation to lawsuits and human injury.
A female dog needs to have one litter
before being spayed. There is no medical basis for this and in fact, the
sooner you spay your dog, the healthier she will be. Spaying a dog before her
first heat cycle provides the strongest protection against cancer and pyometra.
The probability for developing tumors and cancer increase the longer a female
dog is not spayed. Female dogs spayed before they reach sexual maturity
(approximately 6 to 9 months of age) have one-seventh of the risk of developing
mammary cancer has an unspayed dog.
Spaying or neutering a pet is
dangerous. Sterilization is one of the most common surgeries performed by
veterinary clinics. Most clinics will have your pet ready to go home the same
day as the surgery. Your pet can be up and roaming around your house and
behaving normally within a few days, or even within 24 hours depending on the
pet.
Witnessing the miracle of birth is
important for my children. You can teach your children about the miracle
of life in many different ways, such as through books, videos, film, and
discussion. Seeing your pet give birth to puppies or kittens who will end up
dead for lack of good homes is a lesson no one should be teaching their
children. You would be better off teaching them about the miracle of life, as
well as compassion and responsibility, by helping them save a life by rescuing
a dog or cat who otherwise would be euthanized because of lack of a home to go
to.
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