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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Factors linked to heartworm prevention use in golden retrievers

By Wisnieski, Lauren et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2023·Richard A. Gillespie College of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Factors associated with heartworm preventative use in the golden retriever lifetime study.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study found that only about 39.5% of golden retrievers in the U.S. are receiving heartworm preventatives, which are crucial for preventing this serious disease. Factors that increased the likelihood of dogs being on heartworm preventatives included receiving vaccinations, living in the Southern U.S., and having a history of being on preventatives before. Interestingly, dogs that were taller or used certain supplements were less likely to be on heartworm prevention. This information can help veterinarians better educate pet owners about the importance of heartworm prevention.

People also search for: golden retriever heartworm prevention · why is my dog not on heartworm medicine · heartworm vaccine for dogs

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Heartworm disease is preventable with use of heartworm preventatives, but the reported prevalence of heartworm preventative use in the United States is low, some estimates falling around 50% of dogs. However, there are very few estimates of prevalence and its associated factors. METHODS: We aimed to estimate prevalence and evaluate factors, including vaccination status, demographics, lifestyle, physical conditions, medications and supplements, and environment and living conditions, for their association with heartworm preventative use in a large dataset from the Golden Retriever Lifetime Study (= 2,998). Due to the large number of predictors evaluated, we built a bootstrapped elastic net logistic regression model, which is robust to overfitting and multicollinearity. Variables were evaluated by calculating covariate stability (>80%) and statistical significance (<0.02). RESULTS: In our sample, the prevalence of heartworm use was 39.5%. In our elastic net model, receiving vaccinations (rabies, Bordetella, or any other vaccine), being located in the Southern U.S., being altered, having an infectious disease or ear/ nose/throat system disease diagnosis, being on heartworm preventatives in the past, currently being on tick preventative, having sun exposure in an area with concrete flooring, living in a house with more rooms with carpeted floors, and spending time on hardwood flooring inside were associated with greater odds of heartworm preventative use. Supplementation use and being in the top quartile of height were associated with lower odds of heartworm preventative use. DISCUSSION: The explanatory factors we identified can be used to improve client communication. In addition, target populations for educational interventions and outreach can be identified. Future studies can validate the findings in a more diverse population of dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37360405/