How To Get A Pet CPR And First Aid Certification

By Laura Meyer


Just as humans need emergency care from time to time, so do pets. Pet CPR and first aid certification requires demonstration that the person knows what the pet will need, which is often associated with a course offered. The certificate is given at the end of a class for making a passing score.

Wound care is another thing that will be covered. How to treat a wound correctly will be covered, as well as how to keep the pet from making the situation worse. The subjects then covered will be subjects needed to earn a certification. These subjects include how to keep oneself and the animal safe, since sick or injured animals are apt to lash out at the caretaker. Ways to approach to avoid injury and keep the pet safe as well will be covered.

One needs to know what the normal vital signs are for a healthy animal, and what a normal variation is for a healthy animal. It is important to know how to care for an ill or injured animal, because how they are handled in the earliest stages is important. It can even mean the difference between life or death.

Also covered will also be wound care for pets. Everything from how to treat a wound effectively, to how to keep the pet from making the wound worse, to how to prevent injuries will be covered. Information about pet-proofing the environment at home will be covered, as will poison control and prevention. Pet owners will be instructed in what things to avoid with their pets.

Since this field is so new, there are no regulations to guide it. This lets many who are out to cheat or are just uninformed try to take advantage. People who have no idea what is needed often offer instruction. They claim to offer a certificate, but it is only a piece of paper showing they attended all the classes. There is nothing relevant to their skills. Prices can vary greatly, not necessarily in relation to the quality of what is offered.

Before agreeing to any class, make sure of the qualifications of the teacher. They should be a veterinarian or veterinary assistant that will know what is needed. The will have the knowledge needed to perform the procedure and know how to teach it. It is not the same as that for humans. For example, the number of chest compressions between the breaths vary. There is also a correct way to do the procedure and to get the needed breaths into the animal.

Credentials of the teacher should also be checked. Some know to do a thing, but have no ability to teach. Persons who used to teach for the Red Cross when they offered classes in animal CPR make excellent teachers for these classes. They have both the skill of teaching and the knowledge to share with you.

Finding a class that is taught by a professional teacher, especially one from a technical college teaching veterinary topics, being sure to get a certificate of skill, proving that all skills have been tested and passed off, is the ideal class. The student receives a certificate of skill to put in their wallet, showing they are prepared for saving a beloved pet.




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