Emergency visits to primary care veterinary hospitals

Written by Emi Kate Saito and Catherine Rhoads

This paper will present some basic epidemiology of dogs seen for emergency care at a network of primary veterinary clinics in the United States of America. The findings presented in this paper are only intended to provide a bird’s eye view of the common causes of emergency visits...


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Emergency visits to primary care veterinary hospitals

Introduction

This paper will present some basic epidemiology of dogs seen for emergency care at a network of primary veterinary clinics in the United States of America. The findings presented in this paper are only intended to provide a bird’s eye view of the common causes of emergency visits to most primary care veterinary practices, and the progress and clinical outcomes for each category are beyond the scope of this paper.

 

 

Methods of analysis

The health records of all dogs presented at Banfield Pet Hospital during 2014 were screened to identify those that came in as an “emergency” visit. To be included, a case had to meet at least one of the following criteria: the reason for the visit was recorded as “emergency”, the owner was invoiced for “emergency medical treatment” (e.g., emergency/urgent/after hours care), or there was a diagnosis of “hit-by-car” (HBC). A count of the diagnosis entered at each visit was made; from this list, any condition likely to be unrelated to the reason for the emergency visit (e.g., dental calculus, nuclear sclerosis) was removed, and a list of the top 10 “emergency diagnoses” created. These were then grouped into 10 categories: dermatologic conditions (e.g., abrasion/wound/trauma, abscess, bites); HBC or bone fracture; respiratory disease (e.g., bronchitis, tracheal collapse, asthma, coughing, dyspnea); toxin exposure (e.g., plant, chemical or other medicinal toxicity); allergic reaction (e.g., anaphylaxis, urticaria); neurologic disease (e.g., seizures, anisocoria, vestibular disease); gastrointestinal disease (e.g., vomiting, diarrhea, hepatic disorder, pancreatitis); endocrine/metabolic disease (e.g., diabetes mellitus, diabetic ketoacidosis, adrenal disorder); urogenital disease (e.g., dystocia, pyometra, eclampsia, kidney disease, urinary tract obstruction); or nonspecific (e.g., malaise, anorexia, fever). Co-occurrence of certain problems (bone fracture, skin wound, respiratory disease or neurologic disease) related to a hit-by-car diagnosis was also investigated.
 

Results

Nearly 2.4 million dogs were seen in almost 7 million pet visits to Banfield Pet Hospital in 2014. This included 21,840 dogs (0.9%) seen for 22,625 “emergency” examinations, and of these, approximately 57.7% (13,056) of the visits had an exact diagnosis entered into the appropriate field of the health record. The top 10 breeds presented as an emergency are shown in Table 1; Chihuahuas and Labrador Retrievers were the most common breeds seen. Top diagnoses and the frequency of each diagnosis are shown in Tables 2a and b; HBC was the most common cause of an emergency, at 22.8% of all visits. Within the ten “emergency categories”, conditions within the “dermatologic” sector were most commonly encountered (25.4% of all cases), followed by the “HBC/bone fracture” category (24.5%). With regard to animals hit by a car, concurrent injuries were not uncommon, as shown in Table 3; for example 27.8% of dogs had related dermatologic wounds and 11.5% had bone fractures.

 

Table 1. Top ten breeds of dogs seen as an “emergency” visit in 2014*.
Dogs Number of unique pets seen Percentage of emergency pets
Chihuahua  2,114 9.7%
Labrador Retriever 1,932 8.8%
Pit bull  1,292 5.9%
Yorkshire Terrier 1,247 5.7%
Shih Tzu  1,060 4.9%
Dachshund 795 3.6%
Mixed breed 742 3.4%
German Shepherd 720 3.3%
Boxer  691 3.2%
Maltese 676 3.1%

* The list of the top affected breeds is very similar to their breed representation in the overall Banfield pet population seen during the course of the year.

 

Table 2a. Most common presentations for “emergency” visits.
Specific diagnosis Number of emergency visits with this diagnosis % of emergency visits with diagnosis
HBC (hit by car) 2,975 22.8%
Seizures 1,362 10.4%
Poisoning/toxicity 942 7.2%
Malaise  836 6.4%
Laceration  733 5.6%
Abrasion  717 5.5%
Wound from animal bite 590 4.5%
Allergic reaction**  501 3.8%
Allergic reaction (acute)**  406 3.1%
Hepatopathy 356 2.7%

** “Allergy” covers problems such as skin reactions whilst “acute allergy” was used for life-threatening or severe conditions.

 

Table 2b. The frequency of each diagnosis group for “emergency” visits.
Diagnosis group  Number of emergency visits % of emergency visits
Dermatologic problems 3,322 25.4%
HBC/bone fracture 3,197 24.5%
Gastrointestinal 2,032 15.6%
Neurologic 1,694 13.0%
Toxin/poison 1,565 12.0%
Nonspecific 1,117 8.6%
Allergy/allergic reaction 1,077 8.3%
Respiratory 660 5.1%
Urogenital 319 2.4%
Endocrine/metabolic 242 1.9%

 

Table 3. Select comorbidities in dogs seen as hit-by-car “emergency” cases.
Number of HBC cases***  2,453
% with bone fracture 11.5%
% with dermatologic wound 27.8%
% with respiratory diagnosis 3.8%
% with neurologic diagnosis 1.9%

 

*** Note that the number of HBC cases are slightly less than the number of HBC visits given in Table 2a; this is because some animals had more than one visit for a HBC incident.

Discussion 

The list of diagnoses from emergency visits will not be a surprise to the general practice veterinarian. It is tempting to suspect there might be a breed predisposition to having an injury or condition resulting in an emergency visit, but this is unlikely as the list of the top affected breeds is very similar to their breed representation in the overall Banfield pet population seen during the course of the year. It is possible that HBC as the most common diagnosis was biased, as the definition of an “emergency visit” for this study included all pets involved in a vehicle incident, irrespective of whether or not the animal was deemed to require an “emergency” visit. In addition, there is potential bias because over 40% of the cases did not have an exact diagnosis entered in the appropriate field of the health record; however, a random review of these cases found that their actual problems could be categorized with frequencies similar to those cases where a diagnosis had been entered. It is therefore unlikely that HBC cases (and indeed the other diagnoses) in Tables 2a and b are either over- or under-represented, and it is therefore reasonable to assume that the percentages for the co-occurrence of certain conditions related to car accidents, as shown in Table 3, are fairly accurate.

 
 

Emi Kate Saito

VMD, MSPH, MBA, Dip. ACVPM (Epidemiology)

United States

Dr. Saito qualified from the Veterinary Faculty at the University of Pennsylvania in 1997. She was awarded a Masters in Public Health by Emory University in 2001 and studied for her MBA at the University of Colorado between 2010-2012. She has worked for Banfield’s Applied Research and Knowledge team since 2013, following a period when she worked for both the US Department of Agriculture and the US Department of the Interior as an epidemiologist. She has wide experience of wildlife and regulatory livestock diseases and has published several papers on these topics.




Catherine Rhoads

BA

United States

Catherine Rhoads is a senior data analyst for the BARK team, supporting Mars Global Petcare business units using Banfield data and insights. She joined Banfield in 2007 after graduating from the University of Oregon in 2006. Within the company she has filled roles as an operations analyst and a marketing systems analyst, and in her current role she continues to enjoy using Banfield’s veterinary database to find actionable insights that make the world a better place for people and pets.




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