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Horse care amid pandemic

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WCVM resident Dr. Lea Riddell. Photo: Christina Weese.

For the Western College of Veterinary Medicine (WCVM) equine field service team, a typical spring is filled with 12-hour days of visiting barns and farms to help with vaccines, dental care and other general horse health tasks.

But since mid-March, the coronavirus pandemic has changed the way the equine team provides services to horses and interacts with owners.

“The day-to-day work is really different. The types of cases and how we tend to those cases have changed,” says Dr. Lea Riddell, a resident with the equine field service. “In March, we were strictly just emergency while we figured out the safest way for us to work. Now, we are doing more than just emergencies because our patients and their welfare are still our top priority.”

The WCVM Equine Field Service switched to operating in three teams with two to three members per team and with a shift schedule. They also encouraged owners to stay in their homes or at least two metres away while they worked with their horses.

“Everyone has been really understanding about the new protocols. [At] most of the places we have been out to, everyone is in good spirits and trying to do their best to get through what is going on right now,” says Riddell.

“Our Field Service teams have always been cautious about being clean when going from farm to farm, because there are a lot of communicable diseases in horses that you can carry as a veterinarian,” says Dr. Steve Manning, associate dean of WCVM clinical programs.

One common example is strangles, a bacterial infection that can cause respiratory disease. While the bacterium that causes strangles is chiefly transmitted through horse-to-horse contact, humans also contribute to its spread by reusing contaminated tools or wearing the same clothing when working with ill and healthy horses.

People’s actions also play a role in the spread of the most common equine herpesvirus species (EHV-1 and EHV-4), which can cause respiratory disease as well as outbreaks of abortions and neurological disease.

“We are constantly wiping down instruments after one person has touched it so there isn’t that cross-contamination. We are using a lot more gloves and masks … as a precautionary measure when we have to be in close proximity to other people,” says Manning.

The WCVM Equine Field Service team has handled previous outbreaks of EHV-1 — including a neurologic case at a Saskatoon boarding stable in January 2020. There are many comparable lessons learned from managing infectious diseases in animals and what is happening among human populations during the COVID-19 health crisis.

“I think that our experience with infectious diseases and our expertise at minimizing the risk or spread of that really makes veterinarians a well-suited group to know what to do and communicate that to their clients on what they should do when it is a human pathogen running through our population,” says Manning.

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