LIVE LECTURE

VNCON 2025 – Avian Orthopaedics: From Triage to Discharge

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About the webinar

Companion parrots, poultry and waterfowl are becoming increasingly common household pets and beloved family members. As more and more people trend towards keeping avian and exotic pets, these species are kept and interacted with similarly to dogs and cats. Luckily for companion birds, gone are the days of keeping a cockatiel in a cage for the entirety of its life. These pets are often given access to the house, trained to follow commands and engage with people, given toys and puzzles for enrichment, harness or free flight trained, and given the same gold standard veterinary care afforded to dogs and cats. And just like with our dogs and cats, accidents can happen at any time. Pet birds have the added risk of being flighted, leaving them prone to experiencing death defying aerial acts that can lead to incidents of trauma unheard of with our ground dwelling species. Due to their delicate bone structure, avian patients frequently present with fractures from trauma – be it a fall from a perch, flying into a window, catching their leg or wing on a toy, or having an altercation with another pet in the household. Add to that their predisposition to stress as a prey species, the risk of an orthopaedic emergency also being a respiratory emergency due to their pneumatic bones, their smaller body size making bandaging, surgical fixation and physiotherapy a more delicate process, and the species specific nutritional requirements essential for bone healing – a successful fracture repair involves patience, teamwork, owner compliance, and a keen understanding of your patient’s needs both in and out of hospital.

This lecture will take you through the process of triage (both over the phone and in person), patient assessment and stabilisation, diagnostic investigation, fracture classification, methods of fracture repair, multimodal analgesia, physiotherapy, owner communications and realistic expectations of the bird’s quality of life post-repair.

You will be able to join the live webinar directly from this page.

When is it?

Note: This webinar is being recorded. If you are unable to attend the live lecture, a link to the recording will be shared with you a few days following the lecture.

SPEAKER

Iffy Glendinning

RVT, DipVNZS APVN (Avian), BVT (Hons I), BSc (Zoology & Marine Biology)

Iffy’s love of avian and exotic patients began with a Bachelor of Science majoring in Zoology and Marine Biology from James Cook University, and continued to grow with a Bachelor of Veterinary Technology from the University of Queensland.

Iffy has completed an internship in emergency and critical care, a clinical honours in avian and exotics, a diploma in advanced avian nursing, and is currently the avian and exotics veterinary technologist at UQ Vets Small Animal Hospital where she’s had the pleasure of working for the past 5 years.

Over the years, Iffy has published a thesis and several peer reviewed journal articles. She teaches into the Bachelor of Veterinary Science and Bachelor of Veterinary Technology degrees at UQ, contributing towards future generations of vets and techs being able to confidently and competently treat avian, exotic and wildlife patients. Iffy has been the humble recipient of the 2022 VNCA Best Case Report and the 2024 Exotics Vet Nurse Excellence Award, and her areas of interest are avian and exotics anaesthesia, wildlife rehabilitation and palliative care.

Iffy is also founder and director of a registered non-profit guinea pig rescue specialising in palliative care, and shares her home with guinea pigs, parrots, pigeons, fish, a snake, a two dogs.

Live Webinars

This webinar starts at 19:30 AEDT
on October 15, 2025.

1 Structured CE Credit

Race Pending

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Dr Philip Judge

BVSc MVS PG Cert Vet Clin Stud MACVSc (Vet. Emergency and Critical Care; Medicine of Dogs)
Philip graduated from Massey University in New Zealand in 1992, and spent 7 years in small animal practice before undertaking a 3-year residency in veterinary emergency and critical care at the University of Melbourne in 1998.

Following his residency, Philip worked for nearly 6 years at the Animal Emergency Centre in Melbourne, becoming the Senior Veterinarian at the centre in 2004. In 2006, Philip undertook a 1-year surgical externship before moving to Townsville to take up the position of Senior Lecturer in Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care at JCU.
Philip is also co-founder, and director of Vet Education Pty Ltd (www.veteducation.com) – one of Australia’s leading providers of online continuing education for veterinarians and veterinary nurses.

Philip has published numerous manuals and guides concerning emergency medicine, including a CRI manual, haematology and biochemistry interpretation guide, emergency anaesthesia guide, and a ventilation therapy manual for small animals, in addition to being published in peer reviewed literature.

Philip’s key interests in veterinary science include respiratory emergencies, ventilation therapy, envenomations and toxicology.