Articles and Stories

New ViDAS Online Store

New ViDAS Online Store

Now you can wear your support for ViDAS for everyone to see! Check out our online store and shop for gifts or pick up something for yourself!
You can feel great about your purchases too, since all profits will go directly to ViDAS to fund our sterilization clinics. With every purchase you will be improving the lives of the dogs and cats of Mexico!

Thanks for your support of ViDAS! Click on the link below to go to the online store!

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Bacalar Clinic recap

Bacalar Clinic recap

Our first clinic of 2010 was a wonderful success! We sterilized 433 animals (302 dogs and 131 cats), and treated 8 others for various illnesses.

Each clinic is inevitably unique and holds some surprise for us. This time it was the weather: we never thought we’d say “it’s cold in Mexico” but sure enough it was! Imagine a bunch of North Americans excited to escape the sub zero temps and bask in some southern Yucatan sun, only to get there and have to don every stitch of clothing we had brought to avoid hypothermia! We even had to set up space heaters in our recovery area to keep the animals warm. The cold kept all but the most brave potential ‘clients’ away for a couple of days; otherwise I’m sure our numbers would have been even higher.

Another beautiful surprise was the superbly talented and congenial team that came together this year. About half of the group was alumni who knew what they were in for! The remainder was new recruits, including a larger group than usual of CSU veterinary students. With that many new volunteers I wondered if they were fully prepared for the sweat, the grime, the bugs, and the 12 hours a day on their feet, day after day after day. Yes, they were. I always marvel at how readily newcomers pitch in and immediately get to work to get the job done, how they figure out what is needed and unselfishly blend in for the greater good. Lucky for me, this project seems to just self select for the right kind of people. I sincerely hope that all of this crew will return for future clinics!

I was concerned about what the animal population would look like since we had not been back to Bacalar in two years. Our friends there had told us that the stray population was beginning to creep back up again and, sadly, last fall there was a Canine Distemper outbreak that affected many dogs. Indeed, we saw more strays than usual, but I was surprised by the generally more healthy appearance of many of the animals. We saw less mange, emaciation and severe disease than we have seen in past years. We saw more young animals that had never yet reproduced. Our cat numbers are also very significant. In past years we had no more than a handful of cats because most didn’t survive the streets. But this year cats accounted for 1/3 of our procedures, and many of them were purported to be house cats! I believe the general improvement in the condition of animals is a direct result of the strong community education efforts made by our local partners in Bacalar. Dr. Jacqueline McGrath has spent countless hours speaking to students in the elementary and secondary schools in town, teaching the value of animals and the importance of humane treatment and proper care, not to mention the importance of sterilization. After 6 years of ViDAS clinics the combined impact is beginning to show in the animals. There will always be a need for sterilization services (there are no veterinarians in the area), but I am beginning to see the positive impact of our efforts there.

Over the years of my involvement with ViDAS I have encountered a multitude of animals that my melted my heart and it was no different this year. One day one of our local helpers (“Rojo”) brought in a stray, street dog that he had been watching for some time and was very concerned about. She was a typical “Mayan Jungle Dog”, as we call them: about 35 pounds, short brown coat, long legged and spindly. This little dog had obviously had many litters of pups. She also had the largest mammary tumor I have ever seen and was totally emaciated. A full exam and a listen to her chest with a stethoscope told me that the cancer had already spread into her lungs, and likely elsewhere. And yet she was the sweetest, most loving dog in the yard that day. She weakly wagged her tail at my attention and leaned into me gratefully when I gave her a light massage down her neck and back, doing what dogs best - living utterly in the moment. Because she was not owned and was clearly terminal and suffering, we agreed that she should be humanely euthanized. Someone had put a block of Tillamook cheese in the clinic fridge. We fed her about ½ of it and I’m sure she already thought she had gone to heaven! While Gillian held her I administered the injection to put her to sleep. It took a minute or so for the solution to circulate so I held her head in my hands and looked into her eyes and thanked her for being so brave. The last thing she did was to lick my hand as she died. It was not so much the act having to euthanize her that hurt me, but more the idea of what a horrible life she had had, and the way that she had nevertheless remained such a completely lovely dog, such a trusting spirit. This sweet, beautiful creature brought to mind the words of French poet Baudelaire:
"And many times I have thought that somewhere (who knows after all?) There may be a special paradise for the good dogs, the poor dogs, the dirty and lonely dogs, to reward so much courage, so much patience and labour."

This is why I keep coming back year after year.


As usual, our partners in Bacalar went beyond the call of duty to promote and support this clinic, and to take excellent care of the crew. The countless hours they contribute doing the important (though often boring or tedious) work of running intake and triaging clients and animals on the front end, cleaning instruments, fetching and delivering animals, providing TLC in the recovery area, etc., are absolutely invaluable.

They include: Ginny Bass, Jacqui McGrath and Jimmy Clarizio (“the light man”), Peggy and Scott Londahl and www.bacalarmosaico.com, Jim Bacon and Polly Gropen, Arturo Borego of Hostal Ximbali and Ecotucan, Jacqueline Baier (recovery guru!) of Active Nature, Mauricio and Hotel Rancho Encantado, Dave Jobst (Mr. Apendectomy!), our intake queens (Shana, Nita, Kathie, NaDene – you all rock!), Chepe, “Bacalar Bob”, “ Rojo” Ramos, Yamil Marrufo, Dolly y Siempre Fiel, Elaine Roach, Bob Meckling, Sean and Neil (whoa! That hill was steep!), George and Sandy, Jan and Kyle, Stan and Mary, Theresa, Jon, Eva, Luis Contreras, Suzy and Reiner (yummy breakfast fruit!), Emet, Jorge, Ivana, Gerardo, Colin and Kerianne, Rodrigo Pozo, Ulrich Mortera, Maria Isis, Sabina and Tonatiu of El Bandillo, Olga Galeana y Lavenderia La Bucanera, Lavanderia La Lolita, Clinica Animal Bahia y Dr. Patricio Rivero Medina, Hotel Laguna Bacalar, Cenote Azul, Restaurant Kasheel, Taco Cristian, Centro Holistico Gaia, Cruz & El Carboncito, Berera, La Escondida, Club de Vela, La Palapa, La Alcaldia, SESO, Infra del Sur. My most sincere apologies for anyone I have left out and for the last names missed – you are an amazing community, we love you all and we absolutely could not do this without you! A thousand thank-yous!


With deepest gratitude to all who contribute their time, energy and finances to keep this project alive.
Love and peace,
Dr. Lisa McCarthy

Click "MORE INFO" to see more pictures from this clinic!

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SALE! Ginny's Ear Nest Earring rack sale benefitting ViDAS!

SALE!  Ginny's Ear Nest Earring rack sale benefitting ViDAS!

December 31, 2009

Ginny Bass has been making these beautiful earring holders for over 20 years. She has been a friend and supporter of ViDAS since our very beginnings, and has now generously offered to donate 25% of her holiday sale proceeds directly to ViDAS! Click the link below or click "more info" to view and purchase! These make lovely holiday gifts for the women in your life!

http://www.pehaltun.com/Vidas/

From Ginny: Some great things together, my earring holders on sale, and with your purchase a donation is made to Vidas. Something great for the Holidays, for you, and for me.

Purchase at never before discounted prices and 25% of the sale price will be donated to support the great works and efforts of the ViDAS Organization.

Please note: Offer is for USA delivery only.

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ViDAS partners with ACC&D to support safe non surgical sterilization

ViDAS partners with ACC&D to support safe non surgical sterilization

Imagine: preventing unwanted litters with a single safe injection and without the risks of surgery.

ViDAS is proud to announce it's support for ACC&D, The Alliance for Contraception in Cats & Dogs.

ACC&D's mission is: To expedite the successful introduction of methods to non-surgically sterilize dogs and cats and to support the distribution and promotion of these products to humanely control cat and dog populations worldwide.

Please visit their website (linked below) and show support for this very important mission.

While ACC&D works on development of a safe non-surgical sterilization technique, ViDAS will continue our work using the safest surgical techniques available.

Thank you, ACC&D, for all you do.

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Interview with Meghann Berglund DVM, CVA

Interview with Meghann Berglund DVM, CVA

"I read on the College of Veterinary Medicine website that you have volunteered in Mexico to help with the animal overpopulation. How did you find out about this trip and what did you experience while you were there? What struck you the most during your time there?"

As I mentioned, I had some extraordinary classmates in veterinary school. Cristina Gutierrez and Ruth Parkin are two of my classmates and friends, and are both exceptional veterinarians and human beings. More than the president and vice-president of the organization (and sophomore veterinary students at the time), they are the heart and soul of VIDAS (Veterinarios Internacionales Dedicados a Animales Sanos, or International Veterinarians Dedicated to Animal Health).

They approached me my sophomore year of veterinary school and invited me to become a part of VIDAS. VIDAS (Spanish for "lives") is a non-profit international veterinary outreach organization made up of veterinarians, veterinary students, and other animal lovers. VIDAS sets up free clinics in some of the fastest growing and poorest areas in the world. We focus on safe sterilization, vaccination, and parasite control for pets, as well as education for the citizens of the community--most importantly their children-- about safe animal handling, zoonotic (animal to human) disease and general animal husbandry and health care.

I participated in my first clinic the summer of 2003, and was absolutely blown away not only by the need for veterinary services in the areas where our clinics were held, but also by the amazing people who answered the call to provide it. Seeing animals decimated by malnutrition and ravaged by disease was sobering but also inspiring. Our trips became so much more than "spay/neuter and vaccine clinics". We splinted broken legs, treated tick-borne illnesses, extracted diseased and painful teeth, repaired birth defects, and performed emergency gastrointestinal surgery. We removed ticks from dogs whose ears were so infested they were nearly deaf. We trimmed claws that had grown into the bottom of well-worn pads. We administered anti-parasitic drugs to puppies whose bodies were brimming with parasites that not only robbed them of nutrition but also threatened the health of the humans with whom they shared their shelter. We vaccinated against some of the most deadly and preventable diseases known to the animal population. We fed litters of starving kittens. We provided shelter and water for those exhausted by the Mexican heat. But most importantly, we taught the citizens of the communities we served to do the same. Comfort, nourish, love, and protect. These amazing people positively came alive when presented with the knowledge to provide better care for their pets.

In a nation where what little income a family produces may not even be able to feed their children, the heartfelt gratitude for what little assistance we could provide these families in caring for their pets was astounding. My most memorable VIDAS experience was meeting Lizzie, in the summer of 2005. When she came to us, she was weary and emaciated from year after year of raising puppies at the expense of her own body. Ovariohysterectomy surgery relieved her of the burden of further pregnancy, and ensured that no more of her puppies would have to fight for the right to survive. Her family took her home, along with a donated bag of puppy food to help her recover. The next year, they spent what might have been a day's pay to bring her in a taxi to our clinic for a reunion. She and her teenage puppies were fat and happy — but we discovered that she had developed a sexually transmitted cancer. When they learned earlier sterilization surgery could have prevented the tumor, Lizzie's family referred at least three others to our clinic for surgery for their pets. The bittersweet truth of international veterinary work is that there is always more to be done, but that the circle of knowledge continually expands and grows. Each time we return to Quintana Roo, we see a few more pets we recognize from previous years. Families who have attended our clinics with their own pets round up the pets of their neighbors, co-workers, and friends and bring them to us for treatment. Community members make us lunch, bring us water, and give us a place to stay. Children rush to our clinics each morning to set up recovery blankets, remove ticks, trim nails, or clean kennels. People in the community open their hearts, homes and businesses to assist us. We have incredible volunteers who return year after year-- many on their vacations-- and who recruit equally incredible new volunteers to join our crews. > Junior veterinary students tell sophomores, sophomores tell freshmen, and they all return each summer to our clinics and become crew surgeons once they graduate. It has been an amazing journey of service, friendship and compassion, and one of my proudest accomplishments.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Meghann L. Berglund, DVM, CVA
Friendship Hospital for Animals
Fort Collins, Colorado



5062

Animals safely
sterilized by ViDAS.