Microchipping
Imagine if your dog or cat got lost. You’d want to give them the best chance of getting home. With microchipping, you can.
Reasons to Microchip Your Pet:
- ID that cannot be tampered with
- Microchipping is a painless
- A microchip will never need replacing
- Your personal information is safe
- A microchip isn’t a GPS
Did you know?
A study has found that Dogs with microchips will be returned 52.2% of the time while dogs without will be returned 21.9% of the time and Cats with microchips were returned 38.5% of the time while without the microchip only 1.8% of the time.
Microchipping is a safe, permanent way to identify your pet in case he or she becomes lost. A microchip, which is a tiny device about the size and shape of a grain of rice, is placed just under the loose skin at the back of the neck. When a lost dog or cat without an ID tag is found, a veterinarian or veterinary technician will use a handheld microchip scanner to check for a chip. If the pet has one, it will transmit its ID number to the scanner via a low-frequency radio wave. The veterinary hospital or shelter then calls the chip manufacturer, retrieves the pet owner’s contact information, and calls the owner.
Even the most responsible pet owners can’t always guarantee their pet won’t get lost. A leash could break or slip out of your hand, a pet could push through a screen door or window, or a contractor or friend might accidentally leave a door or gate open. One of our patients slipped out the front door when her owner came home. A neighbor quickly found her and brought her to the Humane Society, where she was quickly identified thanks to her microchip and her mom was contacted before she even knew her pet was missing. The story would have been very different and very stressful for all parties if she hadn’t been microchipped. A cat with a microchip has less than a 2% chance of being returned to her owner, whereas microchipped cats are 20x more likely to be returned. Of course, it is important to keep your registered contact information current.
We recommend that you use a microchip, along with a collar and ID tag, to identify your pet. An ID tag is still a reliable identification method. Pets that have tags with current contact information are more likely to not end up in shelters and tend to get home faster than those without tags. However, collars and ID tags aren’t permanent and can be removed (overnight or for grooming); pets can also lose them. With a microchip, your pet will have a much better chance of being identified and returned to you. Pets without microchips that end up in shelters may be adopted out to another family.
Please contact us to schedule an appointment to microchip your pet. Although we hope your pet never becomes lost, we want you to be prepared. We can also suggest a plan to have in place so if your pet does go missing, you’ll be able to act quickly.