Pet’s loss may have been preventable
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Mary A. Castillo
It was one of the worst things a pet owner could ever face.
Janice Murray had been pet-sitting King, a gentle 4-year-old pit
bull, as she always did when his owner was out of town. But that
Saturday evening turned into a nightmare when King inhaled his
favorite rubber ball and began choking.
“It happened right in front of me,” she said. “It wasn’t like I
turned away or stepped out of the room.”
Murray and a friend who had been visiting her Cress Street
apartment that night immediately began in vain to perform the
Heimlich maneuver on the dog. In their desperation to save him, they
even held him upside down.
“I had my hand down his throat, but his muscles constricted around
the ball and I couldn’t get a grip on it to pull it out,” she
recalled.
Neighbors ran over to help while Murray dialed 911. But because
the incident occurred after Animal Services had closed, there was
nothing the dispatcher could do. What Murray didn’t know was that
help was a phone call away through Pet Ambulance Inc.
The dispatcher she contacted was aware of the service, but instead
contacted a veterinarian for assistance and sent an officer to the
scene. As time and options ran out, Murray and her friend carried
King into her car and ran every red light on their way Crown Valley
Animal Care Clinic, the nearest after-hours emergency animal care
facility.
The doctor on duty at the clinic tried everything to get the ball
out, Murray said. But by the time she cleared his airway, King was
gone.
Murray became determined to do something to prevent a similar
tragedy from occurring in Laguna once she learned of Pet Ambulance, a
private company based in Garden Grove that specializes in emergency
animal care.
“We were powerless without emergency assistance,” Murray said.
“Had I been aware of a pet ambulance a lot of time could’ve been
saved.”
“I want to make residents aware of what happened,” she said.
Although she said she doesn’t want callers to rely on 911
exclusively, she hopes that Laguna Beach Police Department will
either make the Pet Ambulance number available to callers or be able
to integrate it into their system.
Last week Murray presented her case to Chief James Spreine.
“I asked her to get that information to me,” he said. “We are
willing to investigate anything we can to provide a better level of
service for the community.”
As soon as he receives the information about Pet Ambulance,
Spreine intends to work with dispatch staff and the animal services
division of the department to see if they can work the number into
the computer-aided dispatch system. The system will then allow
dispatchers to automatically transfer after-hour emergency calls to
the ambulance service.
Even if pet owners have access to the service, says Gary Reeves,
owner of the ambulance services, they should first take CPR training
before an emergency strikes.
“Take a class or have a vet show you how to do it when you take
your pet in for check-up,” he suggested. “Place the phone number of
the ambulance or your nearest emergency clinic next to the phone so
you don’t have to call 911.”
In the meantime Murray hopes to do something to honor her canine
friend.
“King had such a special spirit,” she said. “I want some kind of
good to come out of this.”
Pet owners can contact Laguna Beach Animal Shelter during business
hours for emergency care at (949) 497-3552. Pet Ambulance, Inc. is
available for after-hours animal emergency care or scheduled
transportation services at (877) 957-4968 or online at
www.mypet2vet.com.
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