Saturday, June 22, 2013

1469. House-breaking case studies in Singapore - Toa Payoh Vets Research

TOA PAYOH VETS
toapayohvets.com
   22 June, 2013
Blk 1002, Toa Payoh Lor 8, 01-1477, Singapore 319074
Tel: 6254-3326, 9668-6469
Focus: Small animals - dogs, cats, dogs, hamsters, turtles, guinea pigs & rabbits
Toa Payoh Vets Clinical Research
Dog Toilet Training - Selected Case Studies

For other cases, goto: Dogs
Toilet Training Methods 
Research & case studies commencing in 2005 of over 500 puppy owners in Singapore by Dr Sing Kong Yuen, BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVS are presented below.

The several hundred toilet training articles in the blog and website refer to Singapore's situation and individual cases encountered in practice at Toa Payoh Vets. The reports are scattered over various locations as they have had been recorded over the years since 2005. Each puppy has his or her own unique personality, housing and family situations and that is why there are so many case studies. I hope some useful information will benefit the puppy or older dog owner who has house-breaking or toilet-training challenges.

Please e-mail judy@toapayohvets.com if you wish to have some free advices.    
 
  2008 queries    
1. Regression in Toilet-Training in the urine-dribbling Cocker Spaniel? 2. A urine-drinking Husky puppy.
3. Still not paper-trained after 1 month?
4. Small breeds get away with murder.
5. How a home breeder successfully paper-train 4 pups by 10 weeks old
6. May 26, 08
Partial success in Grate & Pee pan toilet training
7. May 29, 08  Part 1: New Pom. E-mail reply to a first-time puppy owner.
8. May 31, 08  Part 2: New Pom. E-mail reply. Adopt basic principles and keep toilet training simple and kennel cough.
9.  Jun 1, 08 Challenges in toilet training HDB apartment puppies in Singapore
10. Jun 2, 08 Toilet-training. Can you teach old dog new tricks?
11. Jun 6, 08 Success in paper-training a Maltese inside a playpen. 12. Jun 12, 08 Case study. How to paper-train the Pom inside a Crate & Pee Pan set.
13. Jun 14, 08 Case study. Success in Grate + Pee Pan Toilet Training of a small breed
14. Jun 15, 08 Toilet Training  an apartment-living Golden Retriever puppy.
15. Jun 19, 08  The older dog toilet-trains the new puppy.

16. Jun 25, 08 The new Pom refuses to pee on the newspapers. Why?
17.  Aug 11,08  2005-2008 report on the male Pomeranian's toilet training in an apartment. Diaper and floor tiles.
18.  Sep 14, 08  Crate + Pee Pan sold by the pet shop is inappropriate if you want to paper-train the Cavalier King Charles
19. Dec 4, 08  3 cases of puppy toilet training including a night-barking toy poodle (paper-training, pee pan and paper, grate training).
20. Dec 21,08  No routine in toilet training confuses the Golden Retriever puppy
2009 queries


21. Jan 10, 09.  Not possible to paper-train a new puppy using the Crate + Pee Pan housing - A feedback email regarding Case No. 18. 22. Jan 15, 09. An interview with an experienced Chihuahua breeder & other cases
23. Jan 26, 06. Update:  Silkie Terrier puppy being pee-pan trained (e-mail query and reply)
24. Feb 7, 09. 6-month-old Jack Russell toilet-training
25. Mar 16, 09. Paper-training a new Shih Tzu puppy used to pee tray.

26. Mar 21, 09. Success story: Paper-training 2 Silkie Terriers in an apartment. 27. Mar 27, 09. Pet Shop Advises Strictly Indoors for New Puppy but the owners want him to be eliminating outside in the garden.
28. May 10, 09.  How to stop your adult male dog from urine-marking inside your apartment?
29. May 13, 09. Crate + Pee Pan house-training a Spitz  - illustrations by owner
30. May 18, 09. Case study: New pup refuses to eliminate on newspapers of the other dog 31. Jun 29, 09. Golden Retriever Puppy Toilet Training outside the house
32. Oct 26, 09. Paper Training an Adult Whippet
33. Oct 28, 09. Why does the new puppy bark after midnight?
34. Nov 2, 09. Can you teach old dogs new tricks?

35. Dec 6, 09.
Summary of Toilet Training by Ms Daphne Low
36. Dec 6, 09. Car Sickness & Toilet Training A New Puppy 37. Dec 6, 09. Why does the new puppy bark after midnight?
38. Dec 6, 09. Toilet-training 2 Spitz puppies
39. Dec 6, 09. Two common perceptions of first-time puppy owners
40. Dec 6, 09. Paper training a recently purchased adult Westie
2010 - 2013 queries


41. Feb 13, 10. How to grate-training a 14-week-old Shih Tzu? 42. Apr 19, 10 House-breaking a young rebellious female dog - the owner's personality. Peeing everywhere, rebellious age
43. How to stop the puppy shredding newspapers?
44. Urine-marking carpets
45. Plastic grate + Pee pan house-breaking
46. Grate + pee pan house-training success
Follow up on case study Feb - May 2010
47. May 19, 11. Insufficient living space and/or urine-marking in a female puppy
A female puppy starts to urine-mark?
48. Jun 22, 11.
Training a 5-month-old puppy
49. Oct  14, 11. Pees promptly when let out
Submissive/excitation urination 

50. Oct  14, 11. To succeed, use paper training or grate + pee pan training, not both methods

51. Jan 25, 13. Toilet-training an HDB apartment puppy
52.  Jun 22, 13
Email query: House-breaking an adult male dog
Other House-training cases
     
Toilet training your puppy in Singapore         

Updates will be on this webpage:
http://www.bekindtopets.com/stories
/20070719Puppy_Toilet_Training_Singapore_ToaPayohVets.htm

More info at: Dogs or Cats
To make an appointment:
e-mail judy@toapayohvets.com
tel: +65 9668-6469, 6254-3326

tpvets_logo.jpg (2726 bytes)Toa Payoh Vets Clinical Research
Dog Toilet Training - Selected Case Studies

For other cases, goto: Dogs
  Copyright © Asiahomes
All rights reserved. Revised: June 22, 2013
Toa Payoh Vets

1470. EMAIL QUERY. House-breaking a 9-month-old male neutered dog


tpvets_logo.jpg (2726 bytes)TOA PAYOH VETS
toapayohvets.com

Date:   22 June, 2013  
 
Focus: Small animals - dogs, cats, hamsters, guinea pigs, turtles & rabbits
House-breaking a 9-month-old male dog 
Dr Sing Kong Yuen, BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVSDate:   22 June, 2013  
toapayohvets.com 
Be Kind To Pets
Veterinary Education
Project 2010-0129

Friday, June 21, 2013

1468. House-breaking a 9-month-old male neutered dog

EMAIL TO DR SING ON JUN 20, 2013

 

On Thu, Jun 20, 2013 at 7:22 PM, Emily wrote:
> Hi Judy,
>
> I hope this email finds you well.
>
> I'm a first time puppy owner and I've bought my very first male silky terrier when he was 3 months old from a pet farm.
>
> Since day one, we have been researching and trying to get him house broken. However, he's still eliminating around the whole house for the past 6 months. We've been advised by the pet farm owner to get him a small play pen and pee tray when we bought him.
>
> We've tried dabbing his pee onto his pee tray, let him sniff his urine, bring him to the correct spot (his pee tray inside his play pen) and told him to "pee pee" there instead. Things finally made a turn after 2 months. He recognize the pee tray as his toilet area when he's confined. However if he's roaming around in the house, he still choose to eliminate elsewhere except his pee tray. I must say he's a very smart dog. If any of us is near his pee tray, he will eliminate at the right place as he knows we will treat him for sure.
>
> This issue is very frustrating for all of us as it seems nothing will work. We signed him up for obedience class, neutered him lately and we even upsized his playpen by buying extendable fencing to increase the space of his playpen. Yet things did not even improve.
>
> Can you please kindly advise what should I do next? I'm at my wits end.
>
> Please help me.
>
> Regards
> Emily A
> 96XX-XXX
>
> Sent from my iPad

 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EMAIL REPLY FROM DR SING DATED JUNE 22, 2013

Thank you for your email. I am Dr Sing Kong Yuen from Toa Payoh Vets.

I assume your dog is now 9 months old and he was neutered around 9 months of age. Your complaint is that he pees anywhere when not supervised. Elimination refers to peeing and pooping. I presume you have no complaint about pooping.  

There is no easy solution to your problem as each dog and his environment is different. However I will attempt to give you some advices which may or may not be useful.

1. Your dog is likely to be an alpha male dog in personality. He needs to mark his territory inside the house and so will do it at every opportunity. If he was neutered at a younger age e.g. at 6 months, he would have less urge to do urine marking.

2. He is a smart dog in that he will eliminate in the pee tray for rewards and praises.

3. What some Singapore owners do to resolve this problem in my survey are:
3.1  Make the male dog wear diapers for 24 hours/day so that he will not soil the house when he is roaming around.
3.2  Crate the dog when the owners are not at home esp. overnight.        

4. What I have proposed to some owners in similar situations are:

4.1  OUTDOOR ELIMINATION. Give the dog a routine. Take the dog out for exercise in the morning and evening daily without fail as a routine. At the beginning, bring his urine-soiled newspapers so that he will pee outdoors. Use your positive reinforcement training i.e. treats and praises when he has succeeded. Treats can be given when he goes home after successful housebreaking. Remove the poo outdoors to keep the environment clean.

4.2 Crate the dog when nobody is at home or he cannot be supervised for the next 1-3 months.   

4.3. TIME OUT METHOD. If he misbehaves, put him inside the crate on seeing his anti-social behaviour for around 30 minutes. You need to do this consistently and repeat this punishment within a few seconds of his misbehaviour, not long after that.
.
4.4  Family members must adhere to your training commands.

4.5 Some family members such as parents, sabotage by giving other commands or giving treats even if the dog misbehaves. You need to educate them.

4.6  You need to spend time to re-train the dog again.

4.7  Neutralise all the urine-stained areas inside the house using white vinegar + water at 1 parts to 3 parts after you have started either of my two proposed solutions which may or may not work in your case. Usually it is the owner who has no time to re-train the dog and I presume you are one who works long hours and have little time to spend with him every morning or evening. Get somebody to do it consistently.

4.8 VETERINARY EXAMINATION of the urinary system. Get a urine analysis to check if he has infections or urinary stones.

As each management of the dog differs, please let me know if you succeed after 3 months. Best wishes.
Updates will be on this webpage:
www.sinpets.com/F5/20130622house_breaking_male_dog.htm

 
More info at: Dogs or Cats
To make an appointment:
e-mail judy@toapayohvets.com
tel: +65 9668-6469, 6254-3326
tpvets_logo.jpg (2726 bytes)Toa Payoh Vets
Clinical Research
Copyright © Asiahomes
All rights reserved. Revised: June 22, 2013

Toa Payoh Vets

1468. House-breaking a 9-month-old male neutered dog


 EMAIL TO DR SING ON JUN 20, 2013

On Thu, Jun 20, 2013 at 7:22 PM, Emily wrote:
> Hi Judy,
>
> I hope this email finds you well.
>
> I'm a first time puppy owner and I've bought my very first male silky terrier when he was 3 months old from a pet farm.
>
> Since day one, we have been researching and trying to get him house broken. However, he's still eliminating around the whole house for the past 6 months. We've been advised by the pet farm owner to get him a small play pen and pee tray when we bought him.
>
> We've tried dabbing his pee onto his pee tray,let him sniff his urine,bring him to the correct spot (his pee tray inside his play pen) and told him to "pee pee" there instead. Things finally made a turn after 2 months. He recognize the pee tray as his toilet area when he's confined. However if he's roaming around in the house, he still choose to eliminate elsewhere except his pee tray. I must say he's a very smart dog. If any of us is near his pee tray, he will eliminate at the right place as he knows we will treat him for sure.
>
> This issue is very frustrating for all of us as it seems nothing will work. We signed him up for obedience class, neutered him lately and we even upsized his playpen by buying extendable fencing to increase the space of his playpen. Yet things did not even improve.
>
> Can you please kindly advise what should I do next? I'm at my wits end.
>
> Please help me.
>
> Regards
> Emily A
> 9664-XXX
>
> Sent from my iPad


 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thank you for your email. I am Dr Sing Kong Yuen from Toa Payoh Vets.

I assume your dog is now 9 months old and he was neutered around 9 months of age. Your complaint is that he pees anywhere when not supervised. Elimination refers to peeing and pooping. I presume you have no complaint about pooping.  

There is no easy solution to your problem as each dog and his environment is different. However I will attempt to give you some advices which may or may not be useful.

1. Your dog is likely to be an alpha male dog in personality. He needs to mark his territory inside the house and so will do it at every opportunity. If he was neutered at a younger age e.g. at 6 months, he would have less urge to do urine marking.

2. He is a smart dog in that he will eliminate in the pee tray for rewards and praises.

3. What some Singapore owners do to resolve this problem in my survery are:
3.1  Make the male dog wear diapers for 24 hours/day so that he will not soil the house when he is roaming around.
3.2  Crate the dog when the owners are not at home esp. overnight.        

4. What I have proposed to some owners are:
4.1  OUTDOOR ELIMINATION. Give the dog a routine. Take the dog out for exercise in the morning and evening daily without fail as a routine. At the beginning, bring his urine-soiled newspapers so that he will pee outdoors. Use your positive reinforcement training i.e. treats and praises when he has succeeded. Treats can be given when he goes home after successful housebreaking. 
4.2 Crate the dog when nobody is at home or he cannot be supervised for the next 1-3 months.   

4.3. TIME OUT METHOD. If he misbehaves, put him inside the crate on seeing his anti-social behaviour for around 30 minutes. You need to do this consistently and repeat this punishment within a few seconds of his misbehaviour, not long after that. .
4.4  Family members must adhere to your training commands.
4.5 Some family members such as parents, sabotage by giving other commands or giving treats even if the dog misbehaves. You need to educate them.
4.6  You need to spend time to re-train the dog again.
4.7  Neutralise all the urine-stained areas inside the house using white vinegar + water at 1 parts to 3 parts after you have started either of my two proposed solutions which may or may not work in your case. Usually it is the owner who has no time to re-train the dog and I presume you are one who works long hours and have little time to spend with him every morning or evening. Get somebody to do it consistently.
4.8 VETERINARY EXAMINATION of the urinary system. Get a urine analysis to check if he has infections or urinary stones.

As each management of the dog differs, please let me know if you succeed after 3 months. Best wishes.
 

 




Friday, June 21, 2013

1467. Update: Making "Be Kind To Pets" veterinary educational videos

TOA PAYOH VETS
toapayohvets.com

Date:   21 June, 2013  
 

Focus: Small animals - dogs, cats, hamsters, guinea pigs, turtles & rabbits
Making "Be Kind To Pets" Educational Videos 
Dr Sing Kong Yuen, BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVS
Date:   21 June, 2013  
toapayohvets.com 
Be Kind To Pets
Veterinary Education
Project 2010-0129

21 May 2013 - 19 June 2013 - Performance Report of my youtube videos

Jun 21, 2013
Around 2011, I decided to produce educational veterinary videos for www.toapayohvets.com as "Be Kind to Pets" Educational Videos are more useful for the younger generation of vet students and pet owners in Singapore. A video is worth a million words to the young ones.

Most of the young ones don't have time to read and sleep if they spend their time on social media and streaming movies.

I collaborate with my interns to produce the veterinary videos. By being hands on, I strongly believe they will learn more than just being an observer at the veterinary practice, as observation is the common practice for veterinary interns in the Western-education based veterinary studies.

I gave the interns my concept, sometimes dialogue and the theme, e.g How does a vet treat kennel cough? Video. They do the writing and editing so that the videos are not boringly my voice or point of view. It takes a thousand times longer to produce an educational video as compared to writing a case study but the educational value of a video is a million times more useful and I hope more entertaining. The videos are not perfect but it is better to produce a hundred imperfect videos and learn from the failures and errors rather than create one perfect video.

Today I review my youtube analytics for May 21 2013 to June 19, 2013 and the following are the results:

TOP 5 VIDEOS
1.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tmTYP8T95V4  690 views 768 minutes. Kennel Cough Video Produced in Nov 18, 2011.

2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_IktlG2Rkac 162 views  103 minutes. Oro-nasal Fistula Video Produce in Jan 20, 2010

3. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5AWHpWYWgy4
Carnaissal Tooth Abscess Video 

4. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=muCxQdlVP4s
Closed pyometra  & toxaemia


My favourite video is still the Kennel Cough Video. I gave the concept and a briefing of kennel cough to my associate vet and one intern. He roped in his friend who is experienced in video production. The intern acted as the dog owner. The experienced friend videoed and produced.  I left the Surgery so as to let them be free to act, keeping my fingers crossed that the final movie would be great. The angles, voice over and acting were great.

The only thing that the video did not capture was the "kennel cough" of the puppies. The pug puppy did have kennel cough but was recovering. There were no other cases and the interns worked for 3 days only.

Kennel Cough in puppies will sound like an "old man's cough" frequently heard in the 1950s as tuberculosis was more common. However new puppy owners in Singapore will know the cough! This is the top viewing video in May to June 2013, showing that kennel cough is of great interest to new puppy owners.



More statistics at:
http://2010vets.blogspot.sg/2013/06/21-may-2013-19-june-2013-performance.html


More info at: Dogs or Cats
To make an appointment:
e-mail judy@toapayohvets.com
tel: +65 9668-6469, 6254-3326
tpvets_logo.jpg (2726 bytes)Toa Payoh Vets
Clinical Research
Copyright © Asiahomes
All rights reserved. Revised: June 21, 2013

Toa Payoh Vets