By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Heartbroken pet owners and their veterinarians can
keep the memory of a cherished animal alive through a unique
memorial program. Mississippi
State University's College of Veterinary Medicine offers the
Fund for Companion Animals Require Excellence program to
honor deceased pets. Fund for CARE allows friends or owners
of the deceased pet to make donations which aid MSU's Animal
Health Center and improve the training given to new
veterinarians. Dr.
Margaret Kern, associate director of MSU's Animal Health
Center, said the program was started in 1989 as a way for
regional practitioners to memorialize their clients'
deceased pets. The program has since grown to where
individuals make donations in the names of their own living
or deceased pets and the companion animals of
friends. "The
CARE program was started out of what we determined was a
need for owners to feel as though we, as veterinarians and
health care providers for their pets, really care," Kern
said. The fund
is for companion animals who die of natural causes,
accidents or are euthanized. It also recognizes living
animals for the value they bring to their owners'
lives. "Owners
tell us that it means so much to them to know that their
veterinarian cared enough about their pet to do this," Kern
said. "It means a lot to an owner to know that their pet was
special to someone. It creates a sense of good will and a
sense that the health care of their pet is something the
university takes seriously." To date,
nearly $50,000 has been donated through the Fund for
CARE. "The
money buys training equipment, allows the study of diseases
and pays for library journals available to veterinary
students, among other uses. The gifts to the CARE Fund are
used to purchase diagnostic equipment and supplies that we
would not be unable to obtain through our state-mandated
budget," Kern said. "Gifts also make it possible for the
veterinary college to support continuing education, shared
technology and referral services for other veterinarians.
Charitable gifts fund the discovery of new ways to combat
diseases of companion animals and provide laboratories and
expertise needed to train the veterinarians of
tomorrow." Susan
Kuykendall, Animal Health Center administrative assistant,
said the money is handled through the MSU Foundation. It is
used to improve companion animal care at the health center
and the education offered to companion animal
veterinarians. "Many
regional veterinary clinics make donations that they send in
monthly to memorialize their clients' pets who have died.
The Fund for CARE sends each owner a memorial letter and a
brochure that explains the CARE program," Kuykendall
said. About 35
veterinary clinics have participated in the program since it
started. Although most are in Mississippi, donations have
come from Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee. Many MSU veterinary
graduates have begun the program in their new
jobs. "The
veterinarians see a real benefit to their clinics when they
participate in the Fund for CARE. When their clients see how
much their vet cares about their pet, they will come back to
them with future pets," Kuykendall said. Released:
April 16, 2001
Animal
Health
Fund
honors deceased
pets
For more information, contact:
Susan
Kuykendall, (662) 325-1342
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:36
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm01/010416bc2.htm
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