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Vets urged to get involved with Strangles Awareness Week
"We're asking vets to get behing this year's campaign which can only benefit all of us who work with, and love, horses" - Andie McPherson, Chairperson of SAW.

SAW is providing free resources to practices to encourage conversations with clients.

Redwings Horse Sanctuary is urging veterinary professionals to get involved with this year's Strangles Awareness Week (SAW), taking place from 2 - 8 May 2022.

Strangles, which is the most commonly diagnosed equine infectious disease worldwide, can cause laboured breathing, difficulty eating and depression, a high fever, thick nasal discharge, painful abscesses, and can even pose a risk to a horse's life. 

Andie McPherson, chairperson of SAW and campaigns manager at Redwings, urged veterinary professionals: “We know that horse owners are eight times more likely to turn to their vet for advice about strangles than they are their friends yet these conversations tend to happen on discovery of a case, when stress levels are high. 

“SAW is all about education before an outbreak happens. We’re asking vets to get behind this year’s campaign which can only benefit all of us who work with, and love, horses.”

The organisers of SAW are providing tools for veterinary professionals to encourage and support more conversations about strangles with clients. Veterinary practices are encouraged to apply for free resources, including a 'Talk to be about strangles' badge to prompt conversation with clients, and well as an editable presentation on the disease, to provide information and raise awareness.

David Rendle, junior vice president of the British Equine Veterinary Association (BEVA), said: “BEVA are very pleased to support another Strangles Awareness Week and to see new initiatives being developed to prevent the spread of strangles and other infectious disease. 

“BEVA would urge every horse owner and yard owner to discuss infectious disease control with their vet and to have plans and protocols in place.”

During SAW this year, horse owners are being encouraged to take the 'Temperature Check Challenge', by checking their horse's resting temperature every day, and inputting the data into a free online checker, designed to calculate an average and assist owners in familiarising themselves with temperature fluctuation. 

“It is essential that horse owners are familiar with practical measures such as temperature checking so that they can identify infectious diseases such as strangles before they can spread,” David added. 

“The Temperature Check Challenge is a great way to become more familiar with temperature checking.”

More about SAW can be found at redwings.org.uk/strangles, and any veterinary professionals keen to become an ambassador and promote SAW through social media can sign up via the website, or email campaigns@redwings.co.uk 

 

Image (C) Redwings Horse Sanctuary/Strangles Awareness Week

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Strangles survey seeks views of horse owners

News Story 1
 With Strangles Awareness Week just around the corner (5-11 May), vets are being encouraged to share a survey about the disease with their horse-owning clients.

The survey, which has been designed by Dechra, aims to raise awareness of Strangles and promote best practices to prevent its transmission. It includes questions about horse owners' experiences of strangles, together with preventative measures and vaccination.

Respondents to the survey will be entered into a prize draw to win two VIP tickets to Your Horse Live 2025. To access the survey, click here 

Click here for more...
News Shorts
DAERA to reduce BVD 'grace period'

DAERA has reminded herd keepers of an upcoming reduction to the 'grace period' to avoid BVD herd restrictions.

From 1 May 2025, herd keepers will have seven days to cull any BVD positive or inconclusive animals to avoid restrictions being applied to their herd.

It follows legislation introduced on 1 February, as DAERA introduces herd movement restrictions through a phased approach. Herd keepers originally had 28 days to cull BVD positive or inconclusive animals.

DAERA says that, providing herd keepers use the seven-day grace period, no herds should be restricted within the first year of these measures.

Additional measures, which will target herds with animals over 30 days old that haven't been tested for BVD, will be introduced from 1 June 2025.

More information is available on the DAERA website.