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Latest news
Insurance - is your pet
covered?
Don't lose your pet
Pet passports - The Pet Travel Scheme (PETS)
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Insurance
- is your pet covered?
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Did you know that pet insurance is available
for dogs, cats and rabbits at very little cost by way of easy
monthly payments?
Each year, two pets in three will require veterinary treatment
for injuries or illnesses, but if you have pet insurance, you
can feel confident that should your pet become ill, it can be
treated as necessary without any worries over cost.
For more information, call or email
us today.
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If your
pet goes missing, it can mean days or weeks of worry for all involved,
and some animals are never found. As a result, Oakfield is now advising
all cat and dog owners to consider microchipping - a simple and
effective means of identifying your pet wherever it goes. The process
is both quick and painless, involving the simple insertion of a
tiny microchip into loose skin at the back of the animal's neck.
The microchip contains a unique code, so when your cat or dog is
found, a special scanner can be used to detect the microchip and
read the code. These details are then fed into a computer and reveal
address and contact information which ensures that your pet can
be quickly returned to you. This service costs just
The same microchips also form the basis for the proposed 'Pet
Passport'. (See below.) For full details or to arrange an appointment,
call or email us today.
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Pet passports -
The Pet Travel Scheme (PETS)
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The Pet Travel Scheme is now in operation.
It means that you will be able to take your pet dog or cat to
certain countries in Europe and bring it back into the UK without
quarantine. To do so, you must meet the rules of the scheme. This
is a quick guide to PETS. For more details, ring the PETS Helpline
for advice and ask them for a PETS factsheet or visit the DEFRA
website on http://www.defra.gov.uk/animalh/quarantine/factsheet/sheet4.shtml
To qualify for the PETS pilot scheme, your pet must (in this
order):
1. be fitted with a microchip (£21.62)
2. be vaccinated against rabies (£33.83)
3. be blood tested to show that the vaccine is protecting
your pet against rabies (£49.94)
4. be issued with an official PETS certificate (free)
5. be treated against ticks and tapeworms just before it
comes back into the UK
(Prices shown are those charged by Oakfield Veterinary Group.)
To get your pet ready for the scheme, ask your vet to:
* microchip and vaccinate your pet. It must be microchipped before
it can be vaccinated
* then arrange for your pet to be blood tested.
Once your pet has been successfully blood tested, your vet can
then issue you with an official PETS certificate. Only Government
authorised vets (known as Local Veterinary Inspectors or LVIs)
can do this.
Once your pet has been successfully blood tested, it will be
able to re-enter the UK six months after the date the blood sample
was taken. Your vet will put the earliest entry date on your PETS
certificate.
To get your pet back into the UK, you will need, in addition
to the PETS certificate:
* a veterinary certificate to show it has been treated
against ticks and tapeworms. This treatment must be carried out
in the period 24 - 48 hours before you come back. If you are leaving
the UK on a day trip, you will have to get this done before you
go.
* a declaration that it has not been outside the PETS countries
(you can fill this in just before you come back to the UK).
PETS Helpline 0870 2411710
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