IPG Spring 2020 Pet & Equine Titles
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Equine Research News, Issue 7, 2018
Equine Research News A digital presentation of Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation Providers of Equine Research From 1940 thru 2018 Issue 7 • 2018 EIGHTH WELFARE AND SAFETY In this edition: SUMMIT HIGHLIGHTS INTEGRITY, INJURY RATES, AND • Welfare & Safety Summit VIII Highlights DISASTER PREPAREDNESS • 2018 Belmont Stakes Charity Celebration The eighth Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit, held Wednesday, June 27, at the Keeneland Sales • Tribute to John K. Goodman Pavilion in Lexington, Ky., featured insightful discussions on topics ranging from disaster preparedness, jockey injuries, and equine injuries to racing integrity, Thoroughbreds as sport horses, and racing surfaces. The Summit, which was organized and underwritten by Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation and The Jockey Club, drew approximately 200 observers as well as an international audience from six countries watched a live video stream. Participants of the panel titled, “Impacts of Weather - Equine Health and Business Decisions,” agreed with Dr. Dwyer’s point and that it also applied to racetracks, which must have plans in place when extreme weather occurs. It was also noted by Sal Sinatra, president and general manager of the Maryland Jockey Club, that large fluctuations in weather from day to day can be extremely disruptive to race days. Video replay of the summit is available at grayson-jockey- In the session focused on safety initiatives for jockeys, club.org/WelfareSafety/includes/2018Wss_agenda.asp. Dr. Peta Hitchens, research fellow in the Equine Orthopaedic Research Group, University of Dr. Roberta Dwyer, an extension veterinarian at the Melbourne, discussed the link between horse injury University of Kentucky, and jockey injury and the importance of acclimating discussed the importance of horses, ensuring a good jockey/horse combination, having a plan for yourself understanding racehorse injuries, record keeping, and your horses in case of a and regular analysis with regard to decreasing the natural disaster. -
Tdn Q & A: Mark Taylor on Abel Tasman
SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 2019 TDN Q & A: MARK TAYLOR DEBERNARDIS, WOLFE EARN ECLIPSE AWARD FOR TDN WEEKEND ON ABEL TASMAN Christie DeBernardis and Patty Wolfe have earned the Eclipse Award for Audio/Multi-Media Internet for their piece chronicling the journey of Cozmic One, first foal of champion Zenyatta, from the racetrack to the show ring through the Retired Racehorse Project (RRP) and the careful eye of 17-year-old show rider Isabela de Sousa. The entry appeared first online in the July edition of TDN Weekend, a publication of Thoroughbred Daily News and can be viewed here. The story of Cozmic One is told by DeBernardis, who came up with the idea, wrote the text, took the pictures and interviewed de Sousa on camera, and Wolfe, who shot and produced the video of de Sousa, in which the young rider extols the By Lucas Marquardt opportunity of second careers for retired racehorses and the Headlining the Keeneland January Sale this year is the 2017 success of Off-the-Track Thoroughbred (OTTB) programs. Eclipse Award champion 3-year-old filly, Abel Tasman (Quality (Click to continue to p5) Road), who sells as hip 288 during the auction=s opening session this coming Monday. We went out to visit the mare at Taylor Made Farm last week and to talk to Mark Taylor about the six- IN TDN EUROPE TODAY time Grade I winner=s selling points. OP/ED: NATIONS NEED TO WORK TOGETHER Kevin Blake makes the argument that a protectionist TDN: You found out, I'm assuming, kind of late in the year that approach is not the way forward in the face of Brexit. -
Emotional Support Animal (ESA)
International Association of Canine Professionals Service Dog Committee HUD Assistance Animal and Emotional Support Animal definitions vs DOJ Service Dog (SD) Definition At this time, the IACP acknowledges the only country that we are aware of recognizing ESAs is the United States and therefore, the rules and regulations contained in this document are those of the United States. Service animals are defined as dogs (and sometimes miniature horses) individually trained to do work or perform tasks for people with physical, sensory, psychiatric, intellectual or other mental disability. The tasks may include pulling a wheelchair, retrieving dropped items, alerting a person to a sound, guiding a person who is visually impaired, warning and/or aiding the person prior to an imminent seizure, as well as calming or interrupting a behavior of a person who suffers from Post-Traumatic Stress. The tasks a service dog can perform are not limited to this list. However, the work or task a service dog does must be directly related to the person's disability and must be trained and not inherent. Service dogs may accompany persons with disabilities into places that the public normally goes, even if they have a “No Pets” policy. These areas include state and local government buildings, businesses open to the public, public transportation, and non-profit organizations open to the public. The law allowing public access for a person with a disability accompanied by a Service Dog is the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) under the Department of Justice. Examples of Types of Service Dogs: · Guide Dog or Seeing Eye® Dog is a carefully trained dog that serves as a travel tool for persons who have severe visual impairments or are blind. -
Camilo Echavarria PARTNER
Camilo Echavarria PARTNER Los Angeles T 213.633.6800 Partner-in-Charge, Los Angeles F 213.633.6899 Diversity Executive Council E [email protected] Education I get excited by figuring out the best strategy to solve my client’s J.D., New York University School employment problems while minimizing the pain involved. of Law Camilo Echavarria is a fixer – he handles his client’s employment problems so B.A., Government, Economics, that they can focus on their business and do what is most important to them. Cornell University, magna cum laude Camilo gives practical advice to his clients on how to deal with and manage litigation in a way that best serves them. He does not over-litigate. Instead, Admitted to Practice Camilo works up the cases quickly, provides concrete case assessments, and makes strategic decisions to further his client’s goals in the litigation. California U.S. District Court Central District For over 20 years, Camilo has worked with large and medium-sized employers of California in California to defend them in employment lawsuits — from single-plaintiff to U.S. District Court Eastern District class action cases. He also provides his clients with practical employment advice of California in their day-to-day operations and helps them navigate California’s complicated employment laws while understanding the need to run a profitable and U.S. District Court Southern successful business. With two decades of experience including over three years District of California as in-house counsel for NBC Universal, Camilo has firsthand knowledge of U.S. District Court Northern District cost-effective ways to partner with clients and provide responsive, results- of California oriented counsel. -
Health Technology Assessment of Assistance Dogs and Dog-Assisted
Linköping University Medical Dissertation No. 1743 Martina Lundqvist FACULTY OF MEDICINE AND HEALTH SCIENCES Linköping University Medical Dissertation No. 1743, 2020 Health Technology Department of Health Medicine and Caring Sciences Linköping University SE-581 83 Linköping, Sweden Assessment of Health Assessment Technology of Assistance Dogs and Dog-Assisted Interventions www.liu.se Assistance Dogs and Dog-Assisted Interventions Martina Lundqvist 2020 Linköping University Medical Dissertations No. 1743 Health Technology Assessment of Assistance Dogs and Dog-Assisted Interventions Martina Lundqvist Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences Linköping University, Sweden Linköping 2020 ©Martina Lundqvist, 2020 Cover Design: Adrian Berggren Published articles have been reprinted with the permission of the copyright holders. Printed in Sweden by LiU-Tryck, Linköping, Sweden, 2020 ISBN 978-91-7929-834-0 ISSN 0345-0082 To Hampus and Arvid. You mean the world to me! Contents CONTENTS CONTENTS .................................................................................................... 1 ABSTRACT ..................................................................................................... 1 SVENSK SAMMANFATTNING ................................................................... 3 LIST OF PAPERS .......................................................................................... 5 ABBREVIATIONS ......................................................................................... 6 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ........................................................................... -
ARE SUPER TRAINERS GOOD OR BAD for the SPORT? by Chris Mcgrath Bill Finley Has Part II of His Two-Part Series on “Super Trainers” Dominating the Game of Racing
THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 2018 LETTER FROM ASCOT: HEROES AND GOATS ARE SUPER TRAINERS GOOD by Dave Johnson OR BAD FOR THE SPORT? When I heard the Ascot track announcer say, "Tony Curtis is heading to the stalls," it took me a while to put two and two together. "I thought Tony Curtis was dead," the guy next to me in the press box muttered. I was sure he was, too. But then I realized the announcer was talking about #16 in Wednesday's G2 Royal Hunt Cup Handicap. For those of you who always complain about short fields and favorites with ever blinking low odds, consider the fact that 32 were entered for this race today, and 30 ran. They needed three starting gates for the straight-on one-mile test. The favorite was 7-1. And it wasn't Tony Curtis (GB) (Rock of Click above to watch TDN video of trainers discussing the Gibraltar {Ire})--he finished nineteenth at 40-1. Late money Asuper trainer@ phenomenon poured in on #32 Seniority, making him the tepid public choice. Part II of a two-part series, by Bill Finley Cont. p7 Trainer Dan Peitz never had a particularly big stable, but he always seemed to get the most of what he had. He won the IN TDN EUROPE TODAY GI Test S. in 1996 with Capote Belle (Capote), one of six graded CECIL LEGACY STILL SHINING AT ASCOT stakes she won during her career, and he won the GII Fair On a day when Sir Michael Stoute took hold of the trainers’ Grounds Oaks in 2001 with Real Cozzy (Cozzene). -
Canine Olfactory Detection and Its
Jendrny et al. BMC Infect Dis (2021) 21:838 https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-021-06523-8 REVIEW Open Access Canine olfactory detection and its relevance to medical detection Paula Jendrny1, Friederike Twele1, Sebastian Meller1, Albertus Dominicus Marcellinus Erasmus Osterhaus2, Esther Schalke3 and Holger Andreas Volk1* Abstract The extraordinary olfactory sense of canines combined with the possibility to learn by operant conditioning enables dogs for their use in medical detection in a wide range of applications. Research on the ability of medical detection dogs for the identifcation of individuals with infectious or non-infectious diseases has been promising, but compared to the well-established and–accepted use of snifer dogs by the police, army and customs for substances such as money, explosives or drugs, the deployment of medical detection dogs is still in its infancy. There are several factors to be considered for standardisation prior to deployment of canine scent detection dogs. Individual odours in disease consist of diferent volatile organic molecules that difer in magnitude, volatility and concentration. Olfaction can be infuenced by various parameters like genetics, environmental conditions, age, hydration, nutrition, microbiome, conditioning, training, management factors, diseases and pharmaceuticals. This review discusses current knowledge on the function and importance of canines’ olfaction and evaluates its limitations and the potential role of the dog as a biomedical detector for infectious and non-infectious diseases. Keywords: Biomedical detection dogs, Olfaction, Olfactory sense, Screening method, Snifer dogs Background information on odour origin and composition, neuro- Canines are macrosmatics with an extraordinary olfac- anatomy and physiology of the canine olfaction, difer- tory sense and memory [1, 2]. -
Hesh. Saeed Bin Mohd Al Maktoum
THE VOICE OF HORSE RACING IN THE UNITED ARAB EMIRATES 22 January 2015 ISSUE 550 Dhs 5 Anaerobio defends crown in Al Fahidi Fort Deja Vu? Forjatt seeks repeat win in Jebel Ali Mile Horse of the Year Invasor By Candy Stripes Brilliant G1 SW Classic Winner Daaher Jazil By Awesome Again By Seeking the Gold Graded Stakes Winner Sire of 16% Stakes Horses Mustanfar Intidab By Unbridled By Phone Trick G1 Millionaire, Winner of Albertus Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile Maximus By Albert the Great Kent Barnes, Stallion Manager 4600 Ft. Springs Road Inquiries to: (859) 224-4585 Lexington, KY 40513 www.shadwellfarm.com PHOTOS © EQUI-SPORT / ELLIOTT HESS / BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON 22 January 2015 3 Local championships heating up Contents NEWS 3-9 N Abu Dhabi treble on ENDURANCE 11 Sunday for reigning OLO EWS 13 champion Tadhg P N HOW UMPING EWS 15 AO’Shea puts him back in S J N contention for this year’s NICHOLAS GODFREY 17 crown and onto 22 winners. HOWARD WRIGHT / ALASTAIR NICOLSON 19 That said, he remains seven TOM JENNINGS / PAT CUMMINGS 20 behind Richard Mullen whose DEREK THOMPSON / JOHN BERRY 21 season goes from strength PHOTO GALLERY 22-23 to strength and has already NEXT WEEK’S RACE CONDITIONS 25 registered 29 victories. STATISTICS 26-27 He is pursued by Royston AKHBAR AL KHAIL 28-30 Ffrench who has amassed QATAR NEWS 32-33 25 winners despite his main employer, Ali Rashid Al Raihe, REVIEWS / RESULTS EYDAN HURSDAY 34-37 having endured a mixed season M (T ) thus far. MEYDAN (SATURDAY) 38-39 Silvestre de Sousa is on Musabah Al Muhairi Doug Watson ABU DHABI (SUNDAY) 40-41 their coat tails with 24, one PREVIEWS / CARDS ahead of Pat Dobbs, surely the just leading the way with Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid MEYDAN (THURSDAY) 42-43 most under utilised jockey in 26 winners, one more than Al Maktoum continues to MEYDAN CARD/ANALYSIS 45-49 the UAE. -
The Triple Crown (1867-2020)
The Triple Crown (1867-2020) Kentucky Derby Winner Preakness Stakes Winner Belmont Stakes Winner Horse of the Year Jockey Jockey Jockey Champion 3yo Trainer Trainer Trainer Year Owner Owner Owner 2020 Authentic (Sept. 5, 2020) f-Swiss Skydiver (Oct. 3, 2020) Tiz the Law (June 20, 2020) Authentic John Velazquez Robby Albarado Manny Franco Authentic Bob Baffert Kenny McPeek Barclay Tagg Spendthrift Farm, MyRaceHorse Stable, Madaket Stables & Starlight Racing Peter J. Callaghan Sackatoga Stable 2019 Country House War of Will Sir Winston Bricks and Mortar Flavien Prat Tyler Gaffalione Joel Rosario Maximum Security Bill Mott Mark Casse Mark Casse Mrs. J.V. Shields Jr., E.J.M. McFadden Jr. & LNJ Foxwoods Gary Barber Tracy Farmer 2018 Justify Justify Justify Justify Mike Smith Mike Smith Mike Smith Justify Bob Baffert Bob Baffert Bob Baffert WinStar Farm LLC, China Horse Club, Starlight Racing & Head of Plains Partners LLC WinStar Farm LLC, China Horse Club, Starlight Racing & Head of Plains Partners LLC WinStar Farm LLC, China Horse Club, Starlight Racing & Head of Plains Partners LLC 2017 Always Dreaming Cloud Computing Tapwrit Gun Runner John Velazquez Javier Castellano Joel Ortiz West Coast Todd Pletcher Chad Brown Todd Pletcher MeB Racing, Brooklyn Boyz, Teresa Viola, St. Elias, Siena Farm & West Point Thoroughbreds Bridlewood Farm, Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners & Robert V. LaPenta Klaravich Stables Inc. & William H. Lawrence 2016 Nyquist Exaggerator Creator California Chrome Mario Gutierrez Kent Desormeaux Irad Ortiz Jr. Arrogate Doug -
Diabetes Alert Assistance Dog (DAAD) Training Course
Diabetes Alert Assistance Dog (DAAD) Training course. It is possible to learn how to train a dog for someone coping with diabetes or to train your own dog as a diabetes alert dog. We will evaluate the possibilities of the dog and trainer not only at the start but also during the course. In person and by film. In the time between modules the students have to keep a record on paper and by film. We offer this education program in 3 modules, each module is 5 days’ in duration and has to be successfully completed, including assignment before continuation to the next module is possible. It is possible to enter the first module without a dog. We can then discuss the possibilities and requirements to assert a suitable dog. Certification is only awarded after completing all 3 modules including assignments successfully. Recertification of the dog and trainer is required every year (12 months), under our rules and regulations. The level of the education offered by the Scent Detection Academy is well above requirements as they will be composed in the protocol for training and functioning as a Diabetes Alert Dog or Diabetes Alert Assistance Dog by a group of proven international renowned trainers. Program content: Module1 Day 1+2: General diabetes knowledge. General Practitioner and Diabetes Patient. What is high, what is low, risks and importance. Day 3: Basic training, obedience, compared to general basic assistance dog training. Supervised basic training partly done by clients versus pre-trained dogs teaming up with clients. Day 4: Independence, confident alerting under various circumstances. -
From Beverly Morgan Lewis
The Lost Coast H O W L E R MAY 2015 www.lostcoastkc.org Editor: Tina Moulton www.facebook.com/lostcoastkennelclub LCKC BOARD OF DIRECTORS Officers: BEVERLY MORGAN LEWIS President’s Corner President JILL OTTO Summer is around the corner and so are our June Vice President KRIS SMITH Conformation Show and Obedience/Rally trial and our Secretary July Agility Trial and Barn Hunt. We will be finalizing SANDRA GOULD details at our next two meetings. Much has been Treasurer happening behind the scenes over the last year to make Members of the Board: sure our show and trials are again successful, but there is still much to be done. Any help beforehand and during the Sara Borok show days will be greatly appreciated. Deb St. Myers Emily Dalton Don’t forget your raffle donations. The raffle helps cover Next meeting: the costs of the show. We can use new or like-new items. Tuesday May 19th, Both dog-related and generic items are welcome. If you at the the can’t get your donations to one of us before show feel free Adorni Center to bring them early on set up day (6/25)… the Thursday (Address is at before the show. bottom of page) As we are quickly approaching these events we are also ramping up our ring practices so that everyone can be in Join Us! fine form. Look for announcements of the dates and times Everyone is welcome! of the conformation, obedience and rally practices. BOARD MEETING 6:30 PM Our May meeting will be at the Adorni Center on May 19. -
Canine-Centered Interface Design: Supporting the Work of Diabetes Alert Dogs Charlotte Robinson1, Clara Mancini1, Janet Van Der Linden1, Claire Guest2, Rob Harris2
Session: Participatory Design CHI 2014, One of a CHInd, Toronto, ON, Canada Canine-Centered Interface Design: Supporting the Work of Diabetes Alert Dogs Charlotte Robinson1, Clara Mancini1, Janet van der Linden1, Claire Guest2, Rob Harris2 1Open University 2Medical Detection Dogs Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, UK Great Horwood MK17 0NP, UK {charlotte.robinson, clara.mancini, {claire.guest, rob.harris} janet.vanderlinden} @open.ac.uk @medicaldetectiondogs.org.uk ABSTRACT have been researched and developed which use skin Many people with Diabetes live with the continuous threat conductance or glucose sensors [2, 6]. However, these of hypoglycemic attacks and the danger of going into coma. machines have a certain margin of error and are often not a Diabetes Alert Dogs are trained to detect the onset of an practical stand-alone solution to manage day to day attack before the condition of the human handler they are hypoglycaemic attacks [10]. paired with deteriorates, giving them time to take action. We investigated requirements for designing an alarm As a result, Diabetes Alert Dogs (DAD) have increased in system allowing dogs to remotely call for help when their popularity over the last two decades. DADs are paired with human falls unconscious before being able to react to an human diabetes patients and are trained to warn their alert. Through a multispecies ethnographic approach we owners of oncoming hypoglycaemic attacks, giving them focus on the requirements for a physical canine user time to call for help or take steps to prevent the attack [23]. interface, involving dogs, their handlers and specialist dog Diabetic alert dogs use their olfactory capabilities to detect trainers in the design process.