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More Pets Rushed to Emergency During Full Moon, Veterinary School Study Says

Folk Wisdom Gains Statistical Evidence, but No Scientific Explanation

By Dave Maddox, published Jul 20, 2007
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Emergency Room doctors for humans often joke about the full moon and how it appears to affect their patient load, but what about animal emergencies? At the Colorado State University's College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, researchers took data for 11,940 animal visits to their veterinary emergency care clinic, and compared them with the phases of the moon. The results were published in the July 15, 2007 issue of the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA), an organization with over 75,000 members, which issued an AVMA press release discussing the findings. The title of the published study is "Canine and feline emergency room visits and the lunar cycle: 11,940 cases (1992-2002)." While they cannot explain the phenomenon, it does appear that there is a correlation.

The researchers had noticed that emergency personnel, from the front desk to the veterinarians, would often respond to a busy night by asking if it was a full moon. "There is the belief that things are busier on full-moon nights," they said. According to the AVMA release, when correlating veterinary emergency visits with the phases of the moon closest to full - waxing gibbous, full, and waning gibbous, they discovered that there did seem to be some kind of "full moon effect." The risk of emergencies, they said, was 23 percent greater for cats, and 28 percent for dogs. Emergencies they counted were everything from cardiac arrest to epileptic seizures and trauma.

While they statistically showed an increase in the odds of an emergency that occurred during the fullest phases of the moon, there is nothing in current science that they could call upon to explain it. "It is difficult to interpret the clinical significance of these

findings," the study author was quoted as saying.

More Pets Rushed to Emergency During Full Moon, Veterinary School Study Says

Science says the "full moon effect" is real!

Credit: David Maddox

Copyright: David Maddox

Takeaways
  • Dogs and cats are at least 23% more likely to have an emergency around the full moon
  • The study author noted that they are breaking new ground, this has not been studied before
  • Veterinary science does not seem to offer an explanation for the phenomenon
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How unusual! Great article!

Posted on 07/20/2007 at 11:07:00 PM

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