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the 2020 AAHA/AAFP Feline Vaccination Guidelines and resources through an educational grant to AAHA. † A. E. S. Stone was chair of the 2020 AAHA/AAFP Feline Vaccination Guidelines Task Force. These guidelines were prepared by a Task Force of experts convened by the American Ani

AAHA Members 15,131 Veterinarians 15,787 Veterinary assistants and support staff 6,722 Veterinary technicians 3,946 Practice managers 2,589 Other 44,175 TOTAL MEMBERS *Financial and Productivity Pulsepoints, Tenth Edition, AAHA Press, 2019. **As of July 1, 2020 2 Billion purchasing power* 4,511 AAHA-accredited and preaccredited .

The robust advances in pain management for companion animals underlie the decision of AAHA and AAFP to expand on the information provided in the 2007 AAHA/AAFP Pain Management Guidelines for Dogs and Cats. The 2015 guidelines summarize and offer a discriminating review of much of this new knowledge. Pain management is central to veterinary

The AAHA Vaccine Guidelines Are Created These early recommendations prompted the American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA) to assemble a task force. In 2003, the AAHA Canine Vaccine Task Force evaluated the data from these challenges and serological studies and, while noting that the core vaccines had a min-

still relevant nutrition-related guidelines produced by the American Animal Hospital Association. These include the 2010 AAHA Nutri-tional Assessment Guidelines for Dogs and Cats and the 2014 AAHA Weight Management Guidelines for Dogs and Cats .1,2 These prior guidelines address two essential components of nutritional manage-

REPORT of the AAHA Canine Vaccine Task Force 2003 Canine Vaccine Guidelines and Recommendations 3 Tab le 1 AAHA 2003 Canine Vaccination Guidelines and Recommendations* Initial Puppy Vaccination ‡ Initial Adult Vaccination Revaccination (Booster) Overall Comments and V accine † (

Animal Hospital Association (AAHA) accreditation standards and should not be considered minimum guidelines. Instead these guidelines are recommendations from an AAHA/American Asso-ciation of Feline Practitioners (AAFP) panel of experts. Therapy must be individualized and tailored to each patient andconstantlyre .

School of Public Health and College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota). Correspondence: stull.82@osu.edu (J.S.) * These guidelines were prepared by a task force of experts convened by AAHA. This document is intended as a guideline only, not an AAHA standard of care. These guidelines and recommendations .

niche: the veterinary profession. Owen E. McCafferty, CPA, CVPM generously assisted AAHA in developing the first chart of accounts specially designed for veterinary professional practice. AAHA published this first official veterinary chart of accounts in 1987. In 1983, some of the same AAHA leader-visionaries coalesced to form the first veterinary

The 2018 AAHA Diabetes Management Guidelines for Dogs and Cats revise and update earlier guidelines published in 2010. The 2018 guidelines retain much of the information in the earlier guidelines that co ntinues to be applicable in clin ical practice, along with new information that represents current expert opinion on controlling DM.

the practice or home-caresetting, can leadto medical,social, and financial impacts on patients, clients,and staff, as well as damage the reputation of the hospital. To mitigate these negative outcomes, the AAHA ICPB Guidelines Task Force believes that hospital

3 Why Guidelines Matter Veterinary practice guidelines, such as the recently published 2013 AAHA/AAFP Fluid