By
Bob Ratliff MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Pets separated from their owners or injured in the
wake of Hurricane Katrina are finding shelter at the
Mississippi Coliseum in Jackson. Trained professionals and
volunteers staff the shelter. "People
come first in an emergency, but there are animals that need
help as a result of the hurricane," said Dr. Carla Huston,
an assistant professor at Mississippi State University's
College of Veterinary Medicine and a member of the
Mississippi Animal Response Team. "We will assist state
veterinarian Dr. James Watson as long as we're
needed." The
response team was formed about two years ago to support the
state veterinarian in emergencies. The aftermath of Katrina
is its first test. Staff
members at MSU's veterinary college loaded medical supplies
Tuesday, Aug. 30 to take to the state veterinarian's
shelter. "The
shelter at the coliseum serves as a place for people to
bring injured animals they've found following the storm and
for people displaced by the storm to bring their own sick or
injured pets," Huston said. "We're seeing dogs and other
animals in need of treatment for dehydration, cuts and other
injuries." One
of the animals cared for at the shelter this week was an
injured chihuahua whose owner fled the Gulf Coast with his
wife and other family members. "The
dog was the only thing he brought from his home, which was
destroyed by the hurricane," Huston said. "Having the pet is
important in coping with the situation." The
response team includes 16 CVM faculty and staff members who
will work in rotation at the coliseum site as long as they
are needed. The state-wide team also includes volunteers
from the State Board of Animal Health, humane societies,
animal control officers and other agencies and
organizations Hart
Bailey, a CVM associate professor, drove the supplies from
the Starkville campus to Jackson Tuesday night in a 28-foot
recreational trailer that serves as a mobile food safety and
disaster response laboratory. "There
were already about 80 dogs at the shelter when I arrived,"
Bailey said. "A team from Florida also had arrived to help
staff the facility." Two
days later, the number of animals at the shelter had grown
to at least 200, including dogs, cats, birds, pigs and one
goat, according to Dr. Brigid Elchos with the state
veterinarian's office. "The
animals at the coliseum include a group evacuated from a
shelter in Pass Christian," she said. "We're trying to do
evaluations of animal needs in areas south of Jackson. We
will go south as soon as we are able and possibly open a
second shelter." The
trailer-based MSU laboratory will remain at the Jackson
shelter to serve as a base for the Animal Response Team as
long as it is needed. "We
have a supply cache on hand for use in this type of
emergency," Huston said. "We
loaded the trailer with enough of everything from bandages
and bleach to syringes to last a week to 10 days."
-30- Released: Sept.
1, 2005
Animal
Health
![]()
Response team
cares for
storm-tossed pets
Contact: Dr. Carla Huston, (662) 325-1183
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:54
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm05/050901.html
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