Identification of Microchip Implantation Events for Dogs and Cats in the VetCompass Australia Database
Type
ArticleAuthor/s
McGreevy, PaulMasters, Sophie
Richards, Leonie
Soares Magalhaes, Ricardo J.
Peaston, Anne
Combs, Martin
Irwin, Peter J.
Lloyd, Janice
Croton, Catriona
Wylie, Claire
Wilson, Bethany
Abstract
In Australia, compulsory microchipping legislation requires that animals are microchipped before sale or prior to 84 days of age (i.e., 12 weeks or 3 months) in the ACT, NSW, QLD and VIC, and by 6 months in WA and TAS. Describing the implementation of microchipping in animals allows ...
See moreIn Australia, compulsory microchipping legislation requires that animals are microchipped before sale or prior to 84 days of age (i.e., 12 weeks or 3 months) in the ACT, NSW, QLD and VIC, and by 6 months in WA and TAS. Describing the implementation of microchipping in animals allows the data guardians to identify individual animals presenting to differing veterinary practices over their lifetimes and evaluate compliance with legislation. VetCompass Australia (VCA) collates electronic patient records from primary-care veterinary practices into a database for epidemiological studies. VetCompass is the largest companion animal clinical data repository of its kind in Australia and thereby ideal resource to analyse the microchip data as a permanent unique identifier of an animal. The current study examined the free-text ‘Examination record’ field in the electronic patient records of 1,000 randomly selected dogs and cats in the VCA database. This field may allow identification of the date of microchip implantation, enabling comparison with other date fields in the database, such as date of birth. The study revealed that the median age at implantation for dogs presented as individual patients, rather than among litters, was 74.4 days; significantly lower than for cats (127.0 days, p=0.003). Further exploration into reasons for later microchipping in cats may be useful in aligning common practice with legislative requirements.
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See moreIn Australia, compulsory microchipping legislation requires that animals are microchipped before sale or prior to 84 days of age (i.e., 12 weeks or 3 months) in the ACT, NSW, QLD and VIC, and by 6 months in WA and TAS. Describing the implementation of microchipping in animals allows the data guardians to identify individual animals presenting to differing veterinary practices over their lifetimes and evaluate compliance with legislation. VetCompass Australia (VCA) collates electronic patient records from primary-care veterinary practices into a database for epidemiological studies. VetCompass is the largest companion animal clinical data repository of its kind in Australia and thereby ideal resource to analyse the microchip data as a permanent unique identifier of an animal. The current study examined the free-text ‘Examination record’ field in the electronic patient records of 1,000 randomly selected dogs and cats in the VCA database. This field may allow identification of the date of microchip implantation, enabling comparison with other date fields in the database, such as date of birth. The study revealed that the median age at implantation for dogs presented as individual patients, rather than among litters, was 74.4 days; significantly lower than for cats (127.0 days, p=0.003). Further exploration into reasons for later microchipping in cats may be useful in aligning common practice with legislative requirements.
See less
Date
2019Source title
AnimalsVolume
9Issue
7Publisher
MDPIFunding information
ARC LE160100026Licence
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0Faculty/School
Faculty of Science, Sydney Institute of Veterinary ScienceUniversity of Melbourne
University of Queensland
University of Adelaide
Murdoch University
Charles Sturt University
James Cook University
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