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  • Volunteering veterinarian Heather Martinez, right, gets ...

    Andy Colwell, Special to The Denver Post

    Volunteering veterinarian Heather Martinez, right, gets a kiss from one of nine boxer puppies before she examined and vaccinated them during a free veterinary clinic held at Focus Points Family Resource Center.

  • Dumb Friends League veterinary technician Jen ...

    Andy Colwell, Special to The Denver Post

    Dumb Friends League veterinary technician Jen Pluta, right, and veterinarian Carolyn Karrh, rear left, perform canine spay/neuter procedures inside the Dumb Friends League's "Meowmobile" mobile veterinary facility at Focus Points Family Resource Center. The daylong veterinary clinic event was operated and staffed by organizations and volunteers including Colorado State University veterinary school students, nonprofit staffers from the Dumb Friends League and other groups and volunteer veterinary professionals from around the region. The daylong clinic was open to a limited number of members of the public who registered in advance, particularly residents of the Elyria Swansea and other neighborhoods that surround the Focus Points facility at 48th Avenue and Columbine Street in Denver.

  • Toby the chihuahua mix receives a ...

    Andy Colwell, Special to The Denver Post

    Toby the chihuahua mix receives a nail-trim from Colorado State University veterinary students Adam Huey and Jake Rodgers, right, during a free veterinary clinic held at Focus Points Family Resource Center. The event was operated and staffed by organizations and volunteers including Colorado State University veterinary school students, nonprofit staffers from the Dumb Friends League and other groups and volunteer veterinary professionals from around the region. Toby was brought into the daylong clinic by his owner Natali Padilla of Denver, who was one of a limited number of members of the public to register for clinic openings, particularly residents of the Elyria, Swansea and other neighborhoods that surround the Focus Points facility at 48th Avenue and Columbine Street in Denver.

  • Jennifer Hood, right, of Greeley, looks ...

    Andy Colwell, Special to The Denver Post

    Jennifer Hood, right, of Greeley, looks on as her four dogs receive free veterinary care during a clinic held at Focus Points Family Resource Center; looking after the dogs are, from left: emergency veterinarian Jon Geller, preparing vaccinations; Colorado State University veterinary school student Adam Huey, administering vaccinations; and Yuberline Uzcategui, a Venezuelan veterinarian completing an externship at CSU's Veterinary Teaching Hospital. Dogs pictured are Riley, center; Willis, second from right; and Annie, far right. The clinic event was operated and staffed by organizations and volunteers including Colorado State University veterinary school students, nonprofit staffers from the Dumb Friends League and other groups and volunteer veterinary professionals from around the region. The daylong clinic was open to a limited number of members of the public who registered in advance, particularly residents of the Elyria Swansea and other neighborhoods that surround the Focus Points facility at 48th Avenue and Columbine Street in Denver.

  • Four-month-old kittens named Canelo, top, and ...

    Andy Colwell, Special to The Denver Post

    Four-month-old kittens named Canelo, top, and GGG, bottom, stare down a photographer while waiting to be examined and vaccinated after their owner Jessica Casillas of Henderson brought them to a free veterinary clinic held at Focus Points Family Resource Center. The event was operated and staffed by organizations and volunteers including Colorado State University veterinary school students, nonprofit staffers from the Dumb Friends League and other groups and volunteer veterinary professionals from around the region. The daylong clinic was open to a limited number of members of the public who registered in advance, particularly residents of the Elyria Swansea and other neighborhoods that surround the Focus Points facility at 48th Avenue and Columbine Street in Denver.

  • Volunteer veterinarian Mary Carson, DVM, examines ...

    Andy Colwell, Special to The Denver Post

    Volunteer veterinarian Mary Carson, DVM, examines six-year-old Gracie, a Spinone Italiano owned by Mary Kwiatkowski, right, of Denver, during a free veterinary clinic held at Focus Points Family Resource Center. The event was operated and staffed by organizations and volunteers including Colorado State University veterinary school students, nonprofit staffers from the Dumb Friends League and other groups and volunteer veterinary professionals from around the region. The daylong clinic was open to a limited number of members of the public who registered in advance, particularly residents of the Elyria Swansea and other neighborhoods that surround the Focus Points facility at 48th Avenue and Columbine Street in Denver.

  • Aurora resident Clarissa Ramos, 20, and ...

    Andy Colwell, Special to The Denver Post

    Aurora resident Clarissa Ramos, 20, and her five-year-old chihuahua Molly wait in line for Molly to be examined and vaccinated during a free veterinary clinic held at Focus Points Family Resource Center. The event was operated and staffed by organizations and volunteers including Colorado State University veterinary school students, nonprofit staffers from the Dumb Friends League and other groups and volunteer veterinary professionals from around the region. The daylong clinic was open to a limited number of members of the public who registered in advance, particularly residents of the Elyria Swansea and other neighborhoods that surround the Focus Points facility at 48th Avenue and Columbine Street in Denver.

  • Dumb Friends League community educator Kyle ...

    Andy Colwell, Special to The Denver Post

    Dumb Friends League community educator Kyle Warner explains to a group of children how garlic, red onions and other human foods are dangerous for consumption by household pets; the outreach program was one offering available during a free veterinary clinic held at Focus Points Family Resource Center. The event was operated and staffed by organizations and volunteers including Colorado State University veterinary school students, nonprofit staffers from the Dumb Friends League and other groups and volunteer veterinary professionals from around the region. The daylong clinic was open to a limited number of members of the public who registered in advance, particularly residents of the Elyria Swansea and other neighborhoods that surround the Focus Points facility at 48th Avenue and Columbine Street in Denver.

  • One of nine boxer puppies looks ...

    Andy Colwell, Special to The Denver Post

    One of nine boxer puppies looks out from the arms of Colorado State University veterinary school student Kayla Fravelle as she and fellow student Kevin Ruiz, rear, during an examination at a free veterinary clinic held at Focus Points Family Resource Center. The event was operated and staffed by organizations and volunteers including Colorado State University veterinary school students, nonprofit staffers from the Dumb Friends League and other groups and volunteer veterinary professionals from around the region. The daylong clinic was open to a limited number of members of the public who registered in advance, particularly residents of the Elyria Swansea and other neighborhoods that surround the Focus Points facility at 48th Avenue and Columbine Street in Denver.

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Monte Whaley of The Denver Post

Veterinarian Graciela Guzman talked sweetly to the not-so-friendly Shar Pei called Peyton before delivering an updated vaccine into the dog’s right leg Saturday morning. Peyton never flinched and only glanced at Guzman before retreating behind his owner’s legs.

“He’s a good boy,” Guzman said about Peyton while behind the Focus Points Family Resource Center in the Elyria-Swansea neighborhood Saturday morning.  Guzman then moved on to her next patient, one of 200 or more dogs that waited for medical checkups, vaccinations,  and spay and neuter surgeries, all provided free of charge during a wellness clinic Saturday for pets from low-income families.

The clinic, held for the fifth year,  brings in veterinarians and students from Colorado State University’s Veterinary Teaching Hospital in Fort Collins to help local owners who can’t afford high-cost pet care in an area with few local clinics.

“I guess you can call this place kind of a ‘veterinarian desert,'” said Guzman, who grew up in the Elyria-Swansea and Globeville areas and returned Saturday to lend a hand during the clinic. “It’s good to do this, you can talk to the owners, get on the ground with the dogs and find out what’s really going on with them,” Guzman said.  “I just like giving back to this community.”

Guzman, a Colorado State University graduate, worked hard early Saturday morning as pets and their owners quickly lined up to get inside the resource center for help.

Focus Points provides programs for the area’s residents for school readiness, adult literacy and self-sufficiency. So it only make sense the non-profit also helps the other important members of local families – their dogs and cats, said spokeswoman Allegra Mangione.

“Pets are truly part of the family and people want to take care of them so this is part of our mission as well,” Mangione said. But many can’t afford the high prices of vaccinations as well as spaying and neutering.

One caller told Mangione that her 6-year-old dog had not received any vaccinations since it was a puppy.

Demand to get into the clinic was so high that by Oct. 3, no new appointments were accepted. However, volunteers quietly allowed some walk-ins, depending on the case, organizers said.

The Dumb Friends League, Elanco animal health and Clinica Tepeyac, which provides health care to poor families, were also on site to lend help. Clinica Tepeyac clinicians and staff gave free flu shots and health screenings for humans, including blood pressure and behavioral health assessments. Also on hand were Spanish translators.

Andrea Enriquez, who grew up in the Swansea-Elyria neighborhood, was Peyton’s owner and calmed him after he got his shot. She also brought Peyton’s sister, Sophia, to the clinic to be spayed.

“To get her spade and get other shots would have cost about $500,” Enriquez said. “Here they do it for free, which is such a help.”

“Many come here when the clinic opens because the people here are so nice and helpful,” she added. “It’s a low-income community and we appreciate the help, especially for our dogs.”

 

 

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