Rehabilitation: treatment and care of sick, injured or orphaned wild animals and prep for release
Things to consider:
the animal
the environment
the rescue team and other members of the public
Rescuing
observe without handling and without the animal being aware it is being watched
action may not be needed
correct capture technique - equipment
Early recognition that an animal is unlikely to survive or should not be released menas that euthanasia is necessary. It is important to prevent unnecessary pain and sufferin to the casualty.
Prolonged treatment to a wild animal with extensive injuries from which it cannot recover is not in the best interest of the individual animal.
1 of 13
Equipment List
crush cage
noose and catch pole
towel
gloves/gauntlets
muzzles
nets
bags
personal protective equipment
transporting animal back to the rehabilitation centre
2 of 13
Initial Assessment
initial means 'first'
physical signs
diagnosis
3 of 13
What should we be assessing? : Breathing and Pulse
is the animal conscious/awake?
what things do we need to consider if the animal is awake?
what things do we need to consider if the animal is asleep?
physical signs
breathing/respiration
high = exercise, haemorrhage, shock, pain, excitement or fear, heat stroke, disease
low = unconsciousness or sleep. some poisons.
signs that an animal is finding breathing difficult
forced breathing out
flared nostrils
extended head and neck
mouth breathing
large movements of the chest or abdomen
noisy breathing
blue mucous membranes
pulse
fast: excitement or stress, heart disease, shock or blood loss, pain, high temperature
slow: sleep or unconsciousness, heart disease/disease
4 of 13
What should we be assessing? : Temperature
High (hyperthermia): infection, convulsions, pain
5 of 13
What should we be assessing? : Bleeding/Haemorrhag
stopping the bleeding is essential
pressure is extremely useful for control of haemorrhaging (be careful of material)
Comments
No comments have yet been made