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From a howling dog to cats who keep spraying – your pet queries answered

From a howling dog to cats who keep spraying – your pet queries answered

Scottish Sun20 hours ago
Read on to find out how you can win a Pooch & Mutt Gut Health Tests, worth £69.99
PAWS & CLAWS From a howling dog to cats who keep spraying – your pet queries answered
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HE is on a mission to help our pets . . . and is here to answer YOUR questions.
Sean, who is the head vet at tailored pet food firm tails.com, has helped with owners' queries for ten years.
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Sean McCormack, head vet at tails.com, promises he can 'help keep pets happy and healthy'
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A reader has a problem with a barking dog
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Q: OUR two-year-old cavapoo Milo does not settle in the night. He wakes and barks constantly.
We have tried different ways to calm him, such as a night light, playing music and closing the curtains.
He is allowed the run of the house and we even sleep downstairs on the sofa with him. He has three 30-minute walks a day.
We are desperate.
SARAH MATTHEWS, Cardiff
Sean says: If you are going downstairs to sleep with him, you are not allowing Milo to settle or realise he's perfectly fine sleeping on his own.
Why wouldn't he cry and bark if it means you come running?
Adopt a bit of a tough-love approach.
His barking will get more intense as you ignore it, but don't cave in. He's sleeping on his own and that's that.
If you give in once, he'll double his efforts next time.
I was stunned when I got my dog back from the groomer - I think he might have been switched in the shop
If you are really struggling, hire a behaviourist to help.
Q: MY son has two seven-month-old male Maine Coon cats. They are brothers, Casper and Ziggy.
Due to a health problem, now resolved, they have yet to be neutered.
They are house cats but one of them keeps urinating and spraying around the house.
They are due to be neutered soon but will this stop the problem?
SUE WILSON, Sleaford, Lincs
Sean says: It's hormonally-driven scent-marking behaviour, encouraged by the fact you've got two entire males, even if they are brothers.
I would advise neutering as soon as possible now, and hopefully that will resolve the behaviour within a few weeks.
The other driver of this, once it begins happening, is the scent itself, which can trigger them to continue scent-marking, even if neutered.
So give those soiled areas a really good scrub with an ammonia-free, pet-safe cleaning solution.
After drying, use a pet deodoriser spray.
Q: THEO, my bichon frise, continually licks his right paw.
He does not flinch if you touch it and the fur has started going brown.
There's no sign of seeds, arthritis or stiffness. Theo is six. Any ideas?
JAMES CORRIGAN, Kilmarnock
Sean says: It's still possible there is something deeply embedded in Theo's toe, but this sounds more behavioural.
Dogs can start to lick a certain area as a soothing behaviour, or even through boredom.
Licking is a natural appeasement and bonding behaviour for dogs, and it releases endorphins and feel-good hormones.
If it goes on for a long time, it can become compulsive or addictive, and long-term, lead to a lesion in the affected area called a lick granuloma, which thickens and stimulates the dog to 'comfort it' over and over.
The reddish brown mark on a white coat is a natural reaction to excess saliva staining.
Your vet can examine and come up with a plan, which may involve trialling some anti-inflammatory medication to see if there is pain involved, or a buster collar to break the lick-comfort cycle.
Q: I HAVE a five-year-old ginger tom cat, Wispa, who I got through a rescue charity.
They captured the feral mother and her six kittens when they were a week old.
He is a very loving cat but sometimes he will be sitting on my lap and, for no reason at all, he will either bite me or swipe me.
MAUREEN ANDERSON Cambridge
Sean says: This will likely be due to bad experiences with humans as a kitten, and may not stop completely.
It can also happen when kittens have been taught that human hands are toys or playthings.
CAMPAIGN FOR THIRD-PARTY DOG COVER
A NEW campaign calls for liability pet insurance to be compulsory for dogs.
Police forces across the country have seen an increase in the number of dog attacks over the past five years.
The insurance would provide financial protection to victims if a pet causes injury or damage, similar to third-party cover for drivers.
Over 4,000 pet owners have signed an online petition for 'Murphy's Law' after Joanne Newbury, 54, from Stagsden in Bedfordshire, lost her ten-year-old cockapoo, Murphy, when he was mauled by a large, off-lead, dog during a walk in June.
He suffered devastating injuries and despite emergency surgery, he passed away.
Although the other dog's owner admitted responsibility, they had no insurance.
Joanne fears she will now have to pursue them through the small claims court to try to recover a shortfall of £3,500, after her own pet insurance covered most of the £10,000 vet fees.
She said: 'Murphy was everything to me. I want to make sure this never happens to another family.'
Sign the Murphy's Law petition at change.org.
STAR OF THE WEEK
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Ziggy the schnauzer never leaves Sylvie's side
Credit: Supplied
ZIGGY the miniature schnauzer truly is a girl's best friend – as he never leaves the side of one-year-old Sylvie Harvey.
The big-hearted 11-year-old pooch has watched over her when she sleeps ever since she was born and even barks to alert mum Amy when Sylvie is about to cry.
Amy, 35, from Sidcup, South-East London, said: 'He's like a doting uncle. He very much sees his role in life as her protector, as well as her best friend.
'If she is a bit grumpy he goes in for a cuddle and if she is about to cry he comes looking for me and will bark to let me know. He's a little dog with a big heart.'
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M&S changes bra fittings after teen ‘freaked out' by trans worker at Scots store – with JK Rowling calling for boycott
M&S changes bra fittings after teen ‘freaked out' by trans worker at Scots store – with JK Rowling calling for boycott

Scottish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

M&S changes bra fittings after teen ‘freaked out' by trans worker at Scots store – with JK Rowling calling for boycott

Human Rights charity Sex Matters said the retailer prioritised the 'feelings of men' over their female customers TRANS ROW M&S changes bra fittings after teen 'freaked out' by trans worker at Scots store – with JK Rowling calling for boycott MARKS & Spencer has confirmed their bra fitting service is for customers and staff who are 'biological' women after a transgender row at a Scots store, it can be revealed. It comes amid the backlash over a trans employee leaving a teenager 'freaked out' after offering her help in the bra section at a store in Ayr. 3 M&S has revealed that it changed its bra-fitting policies Credit: Getty 3 The incident caused JK Rowling to call for a boycott Credit: Getty The 14-year-old girl had visited the branch for a bra fitting with her mum, but they left after being approached by the 6ft 2in employee. M&S apologised for the distress caused but refused to bow to the mother's request to develop a policy ensuring trans staff would no longer approach girls and young women. But the department store giant has now confirmed they have updated their rules, and trans staff will no longer operate the service. A spokesperson for M&S said: 'Our bra fitting service has been developed for our female customers and all our bra fitters are female.' They confirmed the statement referred to 'biological female'. Harry Potter author JK Rowling led calls for a boycott of M&S if the retailer continued to allow trans women to access female changing rooms. Now activists are urging trans women - men identifying as female - to inundate M&S with bookings for 30-minute bra fittings, which are held in locked cubicles. Outspoken trans woman and activist Sophie Molly - also known as Sophie Sparkles - posted confirmation of a bra fitting on X in a Scottish M&S store on Wednesday, but redacted the location. Molly posted on X: 'I am going for a bra fit. Something that, as a woman, is fully within my right to do so. 'Anyone who believes otherwise is harming the rights of women.' NATS health secretary Neil Gray today failed to back nurse Sandie Peggie amid a row over single-sex space Molly added: 'I think bra fitting is very important. An ill-fitting bra can lead to pain and discomfort. "Being a woman in the public eye, I hope I'll encourage other women and people with breasts to go more regularly to get fitted.' M&S refused to comment on how it intends to safeguard female members of staff when biological males turn up having booked bra consultations. Women's rights leaders today accused the high street giant of 'tying itself in knots' over gender identity, with their diversity policy affirming 'trans women are women'. Human Rights charity Sex Matters says the retailer has prioritised the 'feelings of men' over their female customers, who make up almost 60 per cent of their customer base. Campaign director Fiona McAnena insisted M&S needed to 'rethink its priorities and remember that women and girls have rights too'. She said: 'Retailers that meet one group's demands for special treatment without considering the impact on others are going to get into this sort of tangle. 'No matter how well-intentioned, policies built on the falsehood that 'trans women are women' inevitably compromise other people's rights. 'Single-sex spaces become mixed sex as soon as a trans-identifying man is allowed to access a women's toilet or changing room.' Ms McAnena said the Equality Act was the result of a 'careful balancing of rights' recognising that 'sometimes men have to stay out of women's spaces'. JK Rowling's boycott calls JK Rowling previously called for a boycott on M&S if it panned to let transgender women into female changing rooms. After the bra-fitting incident in the M&S store, the Harry Potter author wrote: 'It's time for women to vote with their wallets.' The incident happened, it is said, before the Supreme Court ruled the word 'sex' in the Equality Act referred to biological sex, not self-identified gender. Rowling wrote on X: 'If stores like M&S continue to flout the Supreme Court ruling on women-only spaces, prioritising the wishes of men who want to undress near, or help fit bras on, teenage girls, a boycott seems appropriate.' M&S sent an email to the mum the day after the incident, which read: 'We deeply regret the distress your daughter felt during her visit to our store. 'We understand how important this milestone is for her, and we are truly sorry that it did not go as you had hoped.' The company previously declined to comment on Rowling's remarks. She added: 'M&S can use the Genuine Occupational Requirement in the Act to declare bra-fitting as a job only a female staffer can do. 'But how can they reconcile that with policies that tell trans-identifying men they can use women's facilities because 'trans women are women'? 'Staff and customers alike should have access to single-sex facilities.' Ms McAnena warned employers may even find themselves breaking the law if they let men who identify as women use female-only toilets and changing rooms, as the Workplace Regulations require employers to provide single-sex facilities for their staff. Women's Rights Network Scotland (WRNS) says the retailer has been caught in a 'tangle of its own making' and had a 'major problem' regarding the lawfulness of their so-called Inclusion policy. Spokeswoman Mary Howden said: 'Men who identify as women are men and should be nowhere near women's changing rooms. 'It's really that simple, and the law is quite clear on this.' Ms Howden added: 'The sooner M&S sort itself out, the better.' Women's rights groups say they are planning a series of further demos at M&S stores after targeting their flagship Argyle Street branch in Glasgow last Sunday. Inverness and Aberdeen stores are among those being targeted, with others set to follow. Women Won't Wheesht spokeswoman Clare Blom said they were 'determined' to shine a spotlight on the retailer's 'failure to prioritise the safety and dignity of women and children' over the feelings of men.

I thought I was just stressed from a triple tragedy – then an alert on my watch said my own life was in danger
I thought I was just stressed from a triple tragedy – then an alert on my watch said my own life was in danger

Scottish Sun

time8 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

I thought I was just stressed from a triple tragedy – then an alert on my watch said my own life was in danger

Sam was convinced her symptoms were nothing to worry about until a notification on her Apple Watch changed everything HIDDEN THREAT I thought I was just stressed from a triple tragedy – then an alert on my watch said my own life was in danger Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) CONSUMED by grief following the death of her father, loss of her pet dog and the breakdown of her marriage, Sam Adams felt like her life had hit rock bottom. But nothing could prepare her for what was to come - a series of events that began with her Apple Watch going off, and ended with her life hanging in the balance. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 7 Sam Adams was feeling stressed after her marriage broken down, her dad died and she lost her dog Credit: Sam Adams 7 But her life was actually in danger - something she had no idea about until a notification from her Apple Watch Credit: Sam Adams Sam, 57, who lives near Brighton, East Sussex, tells Sun Health: 'In 2020, I lost my dad. I nursed him in the last couple of weeks of his life. 'My dog passed away suddenly and my marriage had recently broken down all within a matter of months. 'The grief was literally almost unbearable. It challenged my sense of identity and it left me struggling to move forward with anything in my life or business. 'I felt completely stuck. I was hugely stressed, although I felt like I was mentally strong. 'I felt like I was emotionally drowning and hit rock bottom with depression.' After spending most of 2021 'piecing herself together' - Sam embarked on a one-month solo trip to Costa Rica the following year. 'It gave me a reset,' she says. 'I fell in love with trees and nature and I got into a regular breathwork practice out there, which became a big part of my healing.' But just two weeks after returning home, things took another, unexpected turn. 'I'd hit my head badly while I was away and couldn't shake off this jet lag feeling,' says Sam. 'I got out of my car looking at my phone to find a coffee shop and hit my head on a metal pole. I was given a week to live after doctors found a decade-old tumour on my brain 'I was dazed and bruised so I took it easy for a few days. 'But after I had been back for two weeks, I was still feeling awful. 'I thought it was jet lag - I had really low energy and a dull headache at the front of my head. 'My Apple Watch also kept saying my heart rate was low.' Sam says she didn't pay a huge amount of notice at first - she had just returned home after a life-changing trip and an 11-hour flight, and was battling a seven-hour time difference after all. But two weeks later, she went to a pharmacist to get her blood pressure checked. The results were sent to her GP and Sam says she received a call the same day telling her she needed to come in first thing, do no exercise and ring 999 if she suffered shoulder, chest or jaw pain. I was spiralling. I slept sitting up and was terrified to go to sleep in case I wouldn't wake up Sam Adams 'I was very alarmed,' she recalls. 'I went out for dinner with my sister that night and we were both so worried. 'The next day I had an ECG and it was discovered that my heart was throwing out ectopic beats.' Also known as cardiac ectopy, the condition causes extra beats or palpitations that feel like your heart is skipping a beat. Stress, anxiety, a lack of sleep, too much booze, smoking and caffeine are all triggers for the common issue, which is usually harmless and doesn't damage the heart, according to the British Heart Foundation. In some cases though, it can be deadly. Medics sent Sam for further investigations - and she spent the day in hospital having blood tests. 'They asked if I had done any foreign travel and when I said 'yes', they asked if anything had happened,' she says. 'I said I had hit my head so I went for a CT scan.' 7 Sam was diagnosed with cardiac ectopy, then doctors discovered she had a brain tumour Credit: Sam Adams 7 'I was completely forced to face my own mortality,' she says Credit: Sam Adams 7 Sam had to wear a heart monitor and start taking medication Credit: Sam Adams Sam was given a heart monitor to wear for 24 hours, and was prescribed beta blockers, which are used to slow down the heart. Two weeks later she received a call from her cardiologist - one she will never forget. It was earth-shattering news; they had discovered a brain tumour. Despite having nothing to do with her head injury, or heart condition, the CT scan she had had as a result of her investigations had proved vital. Sam, who loved tennis and bike riding but was no longer able to exercise says: 'My head was spinning, I was spiralling; I sat alone on the sofa and phoned my sister. 'I was completely forced to face my own mortality - mentally it was huge. 'I slept sitting up and was terrified to go to sleep in case I wouldn't wake up.' The 6 barely-there symptoms of a brain tumour BRAIN tumours are one of the most deadly forms of cancer — but not all tumours are cancerous. Glioblastomas are the most common type of malignant brain tumour, affecting around 2,200 Brits a year and making up a third of all brain tumours diagnosed in England between 1995 and 2017. They develop from glial cells — the supporting cells of the brain and spinal cord. Other types of brain tumour, both cancerous and not, include: astrocytoma, ependymoma, medulloblastoma, pituitary and spinal cord. Doctors can test for tumours with MRI or CT scans, as well as neurological examinations and biopsies. The main treatments are surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, as well as supportive treatments to ease symptoms. Symptoms depend on where tumours are located on the brain and can often be missed at the early stages of the disease, when it is easier to treat. They can also easily be mistaken for something else, so it is important to know what to watch out for. While they can cause headaches, nausea and seizures, some more subtle signs include: Getting irritated easily - as well as losing motivation, depression, anxiety, mood swings and difficulty planning, organising or identifying emotions Growth spurts - brain tumours can affect the pituitary gland (a part of the brain that makes hormones, including the ones that cause growth), so they can cause people to quickly increase in height Difficulty making facial expressions due to nerve damage (e.g. being unable to smile, frown or move their face when speaking) Voices in your head - as well as short-term memory loss Struggling to read Needing the toilet more often due to changes to the endocrine system (which controls a range of bodily functions) Due to the location of Sam's tumour, doctors have told her that while it is likely to be benign, it is inoperable. She has to take aspirin every day for the rest of her life, and has brain scans every month. 'I was told these tumours are generally benign and they don't operate unless it is impacting life,' she says. 'But it can affect your vision and speech, and cause seizures. 'It can't be operated on because of where it is but they want to keep a close eye on it so if it does start to grow they will have to intervene.' In August 2022, Sam, who also takes blood pressure tablets, underwent an ablation - a procedure using heat or cold energy to create tiny scars in the heart and stop the electrical impulses that cause irregular heart rhythms. She says: 'My heart was under immense strain and needed treatment.' Sam recalls how she could not be sedated as they had to see her heart. She describes the ordeal, where her organ was 'zapped', as 'horrific'. 7 Sam says she has 'gone through hell' but breathwork has helped her find hope Credit: Sam Adams 7 She believes her ordeal was triggered by stress Credit: Sam Adams Now, still living with the tumour, which she has nicknamed Timmy, she says: 'I have gone through hell. 'I worry about the brain tumour. If I lose balance I catastrophise, asking myself, 'Is it Timmy?' 'I suffer what I call 'scanxiety' - both pre and post my scans. 'I am 2st heavier and I don't have the energy I used to.' Looking back, Sam believes stress was the cause of her ordeal. 'The early warning I didn't know I needed' 'In 2020, like many others, I experienced extreme emotional pressure - and I now understand just how much unprocessed stress and trauma can live in the body,' she says. 'That realisation led me to deepen my own healing and ultimately shape the work I now do through Life and Breath — a method that combines deep coaching and breathwork to help people move through emotional overload, burnout, and feeling stuck. 'Breathwork has been a powerful part of my own recovery. 'It's helped me regulate my nervous system, reconnect with my body, and process the stress I didn't even realise I'd been carrying. 'I now guide others through the same techniques — from business leaders to athletes — helping them find clarity, calm, and resilience before their bodies shout for attention like mine did.' While Sam's heart issue has been successfully treated, medics regularly monitor her brain tumour. In spite of everything she's been through, she says she feels lucky. 'That trip to Costa Rica gave me the space and courage I needed; it reminded me what life is about,' Sam adds. 'I came back clearer, braver, and more connected to myself than I'd been in years. 'Now I work as a life coach and breathwork facilitator, helping others reconnect with themselves after big life moments. 'And I am so grateful for my Apple Watch - I don't know what would have happened if it had not gone off. 'I still live with the tumour, but I'm well, managing it, and grateful that technology gave me the early warning I didn't know I needed.'

AI is helping doctors write up medical notes in bid to get patients out of hospital beds faster
AI is helping doctors write up medical notes in bid to get patients out of hospital beds faster

Scottish Sun

time17 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

AI is helping doctors write up medical notes in bid to get patients out of hospital beds faster

The technology is being piloted at Chelsea and Westminster NHS Trust FEEL A BOT BETTER AI is helping doctors write up medical notes in bid to get patients out of hospital beds faster Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) AI is helping doctors write up medical notes to try to get patients out of hospital beds faster. The tech means they spend less time filling in forms, cutting delays in discharging those fit to go home. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up It creates a summary using information such as diagnoses and test results from medical records. The document can then be reviewed by medical teams and used to send patients home or refer them to other services. The technology is being piloted at Chelsea and Westminster NHS Trust. Health Secretary Wes Streeting said: 'This potentially transformational discharge tool is a prime example of how we're shifting from analogue to digital. 'We're using cutting-edge technology to build an NHS fit for the future and tackle the hospital backlogs that have left too many people waiting too long. 'Doctors will spend less time on paperwork and more time with patients, getting people home to their families faster and freeing up beds for those who need them most.' As part of their AI revolution, the Government has also announced tech is being given to all 12,000 probation officers. A programme called Justice Transcribe will help them take notes in meetings with offenders after they leave prison. It was found to halve the time officers spent organising notes between meetings and in their personal time. Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said: 'This is exactly the kind of change we need, AI being used to give doctors, probation officers and other key workers more time to focus on delivering better outcomes and speeding up vital services.' AI VR Hospital of the future Tel Aviv feature - Sun on Sunday Exclusive

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