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- NATION, Page 43American NotesDRUGSJust Say No, Rover
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- Police work is full of occupational hazards. But canine cops
- working the drug beat face a special risk: getting high, and
- sometimes fatally intoxicated, on the stashes they are trained
- to sniff out. Veterinarian Val Beasley of the University of
- Illinois reports that his office receives about six calls a year
- concerning overdosed police dogs. "They don't eat the drugs
- because they like them," he explains. "In the excitement of the
- chase, they inadvertently inhale or swallow them when they pick
- up the objects in their mouths."
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- Because the caches nosed out by doggy detectives may be
- uncut and especially potent, even small ingestions can be
- extremely dangerous, sometimes causing death on the spot. An
- article that Beasley and a colleague published in the Journal
- of the American Veterinary Medical Association recommends, among
- other things, that police carry artificial resuscitation devices
- for their four-footed friends and a supply of activated charcoal
- that the dogs can swallow in solution to absorb most drugs
- before digestion. Because dogs, unlike their masters, just can't
- say no.
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