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Financial help for sick and injured pets
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If you can't afford vet care these groups my help.
RAIN obtained this list from another source and has no experience with
any of the groups.
Here is a list of organizations that help owners that cannot afford vet
care. Most of them handle serious medical conditions and injury. Some
focus on low income, elderly and handicapped owners. A couple of them
are for rescue organizations and homeless pets.
American Animal Hospital Association
www.aahahelpingpets.org/home
The heartbreak happens all too often. A pet owner is unable to afford
treatment and their sick or injured companion animal pays the price. If
the owner is elderly, disabled or on a fixed income, the cost of care
may be too much of a stretch for their pocketbook. Perhaps they have
been victimized by crime, property loss or a job layoff and are
experiencing a temporary financial hardship making it too difficult to
afford pet care. And some animals, brought to clinics by Good
Samaritans, don't have an owner to pay for treatment. Whatever the
situation, the fact remains the same: When sick or injured animals are
unable to receive veterinary care, they suffer. Through the AAHA Helping
Pets Fund, veterinary care is possible for sick or injured pets even if
they have been abandoned or if their owner is experiencing financial
hardship."
Angels 4 Animals
www.Angels4Animals.org
"Angels4Animals, a non-profit organization and a program of Inner Voice
Community Services, has a mission to serve as the guardian angel of
animals whose caretakers find themselves in difficult financial
situations. At Angels4Animals we believe that animal owners should not
have to say goodbye to the animals that they love. Our work is
accomplished in conjunction with veterinary clinics across the country,
eager to assist as many animals, and their owners, as possible. Our
services range from financial aid to complete treatment to those pets
and pet owners in need."
Care Credit
www.carecredit.com
A credit card company for health care, including veterinary care. "CareCredit,
the leader in patient/client financing, has helped more than 3 million
patients/clients get the treatment or procedures they needed and wanted.
With a comprehensive range of plan options, for treatment or procedure
fees from $1 to over $25,000, we offer a plan and a low monthly payment
to fit comfortably into almost every budget."
Feline Veterinary Emergency Assistance (FVEAP)
www.fveap.org/sys-tmpl/door
"The NEED & The HELP: Seniors, People with disabilities, People who have
lost their job, Good Samaritans who rescue a cat or kitten - any of
these folks may need financial assistance to save a beloved companion."
The Feline Veterinary Emergency Assistance Program is a nonprofit 501
(c)(3) organization that provides financial assistance to cat and kitten
guardians who are unable to afford veterinary services to save their
companions when life-threatening illness or injury strikes.
Help-A-Pet
www.help-a-pet.org/home.html
"Our efforts focus on serving the elderly, the disabled, and the working
poor. For lonely seniors, physically/mentally challenged individuals and
children of working parents, pets represent much more than a diversion."
IMOM
www.imom.org
"Mission Statement:
Helping people help pets. To better the lives of sick, injured and
abused companion animals. We are dedicated to insure that no companion
animal has to be euthanized simply because their caretaker is
financially challenged."
The Pet Fund
thepetfund.com
"The Pet Fund is a registered 501(c)3 nonprofit association that
provides financial assistance to owners of domestic animals who need
urgent veterinary care. Often animals are put down or suffer needlessly
because their owners cannot afford expensive surgery or emergency vet
visits. Companion animal owners must often make the difficult decision
to put an animal down or neglect urgent medical needs because of the
costs involved. The purpose of the Pet Fund is to work towards a future
where decisions about companion animal medical care need never be made
on the basis of cost."
United Animal Nations
www.uan.org/lifeline/index.html_
"The mission of LifeLine is to help homeless or recently rescued animals
suffering from life-threatening conditions that require specific and
immediate emergency veterinary care. We strive to serve Good Samaritans
and rescue groups who take in sick or injured animals. In certain cases,
LifeLine can also assist senior citizens and low-income families pay for
immediate emergency veterinary care."
Groups Who are Breed or Injury Specific:
Corgi Aid
www.corgiaid.org
Dachshunds Needing IVDD surgery
members.rushmore.com/~dds/applyforhelp.htm
HandicappedPets.com
www.handicappedpets.com/Articles/help/
"From time to time, HandicappedPets.com recognizes a caretaker of
handicapped pets that need some special attention, and a little extra
help. There are those who are so selflessly dedicated to their animal
families that they give up a little more than they can afford."
Labrador Lifeline
www.labradorlifeline.org/success/2005-abbey.htm
LabMed: Rx For Rescued Labs
www.labmed.org/aid_main.html
RAIN Contact Information
Telephone (407) 620-9736
Postal address P.O. Box 608221 Orlando, FL. 32860-8221


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