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This episode of Canine Arthritis Matters takes a practical look at how telehealth can strengthen osteoarthritis care in the UK (and beyond). Host Hannah Capon is joined by registered veterinary nurse Evie Tumon and senior anaesthetist/pain specialist Dr. James Hunt to unpack what remote guidance adds: time to listen, continuity, calmer conversations outside the “white coat” setting, and a clearer framework for weight, lifestyle, and analgesia decisions that owners can take back to their primary vet. The team discuss variability in current OA care, why “no recipes” means we must monitor and adapt, and how validated tools (like the Canine Brief Pain Inventory) help align owner perception with a dog’s day-to-day function. They also share how the CAM teleguidance service supports overloaded practices by offering owners structured coaching, while reinforcing that in-person exams and prescribing stay with the primary vet.
Guest Bios:
Evie Tummon, RVN
Evie is a registered veterinary nurse working in clinical practice and on CAM’s tele-platform, where she hosts discovery calls and leads nurse calls. Her focus is demystifying choices for overwhelmed caregivers and breaking change into doable steps that fit each home and dog.
Dr. James Hunt
James is a senior anaesthetist at a multidisciplinary referral hospital, runs Pet Pain Relief (a clinic dedicated to pain management), and is a specialist in ethics and welfare with a PhD focused on chronic pain/OA. In CAM’s tele service he helps owners and vets build robust, basics-first plans—weight, lifestyle, analgesia—and use validated tracking so everyone can see what’s working.
Key Takeaways:
1. Telehealth complements, it doesn’t replace. Remote sessions remove time pressure, reduce the “frozen in the consult room” effect, and let clinicians tailor plans to the caregiver’s reality—then loop back to the primary vet for exams and prescribing.
2. Framework over “fix.” OA management isn’t a one-step recipe; start with weight, daily life changes, and clear priorities, then add/adjust analgesia and adjuncts based on response.
3. Measure what matters. Pair an owner’s unique pain indicators with a validated tool like the Canine Brief Pain Inventory to track severity, interference with activities, and quality of life over time. Expect scores to spark useful conversations, not just produce a “number.”
4. Lower the stress to raise the care. For reactive or anxious dogs, remote guidance can be a lifeline; it builds caregiver confidence and plans for low-stress vet visits (timing, ramps, car setups) before the next in-person appointment.
5. Plan for flares and continuity. Set expectations that flare-ups happen, agree an analgesic “flare plan” in advance, and keep the same clinician(s) involved so owners feel heard and supported across visits.
Relevant Links:
Get Support Through Teleguidance
Whether you’re feeling overwhelmed with options or just want a clear, step-by-step plan for your dog’s osteoarthritis care, our teleguidance team is here to help. You’ll receive personalised advice you can take straight back to your own vet—without leaving home.
Find out more: https://caninearthritisteleguidance.co.uk
Chronic Pain Symposium On-Demand
Missed the live event? Watch all lectures anytime through the Education Centre and level up your OA toolkit.
Access now: https://www.cameducation.co.uk/
Join the CAM Member Zone
Get ongoing support, templates, webinars, and Q&As to manage canine OA more confidently.
Join here: https://www.caninearthritis.co.uk/member-zone/
Learn more about CAM:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CAMarthritis
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/canine_arthritis
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CanineArthritisManagement
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/canine-arthritis-management-ltd
Have questions send them to: [email protected]
Stay tuned to learn how early detection can make a significant difference in managing OA in younger dogs.
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This episode of Canine Arthritis Matters takes a practical look at how telehealth can strengthen osteoarthritis care in the UK (and beyond). Host Hannah Capon is joined by registered veterinary nurse Evie Tumon and senior anaesthetist/pain specialist Dr. James Hunt to unpack what remote guidance adds: time to listen, continuity, calmer conversations outside the “white coat” setting, and a clearer framework for weight, lifestyle, and analgesia decisions that owners can take back to their primary vet. The team discuss variability in current OA care, why “no recipes” means we must monitor and adapt, and how validated tools (like the Canine Brief Pain Inventory) help align owner perception with a dog’s day-to-day function. They also share how the CAM teleguidance service supports overloaded practices by offering owners structured coaching, while reinforcing that in-person exams and prescribing stay with the primary vet.
Guest Bios:
Evie Tummon, RVN
Evie is a registered veterinary nurse working in clinical practice and on CAM’s tele-platform, where she hosts discovery calls and leads nurse calls. Her focus is demystifying choices for overwhelmed caregivers and breaking change into doable steps that fit each home and dog.
Dr. James Hunt
James is a senior anaesthetist at a multidisciplinary referral hospital, runs Pet Pain Relief (a clinic dedicated to pain management), and is a specialist in ethics and welfare with a PhD focused on chronic pain/OA. In CAM’s tele service he helps owners and vets build robust, basics-first plans—weight, lifestyle, analgesia—and use validated tracking so everyone can see what’s working.
Key Takeaways:
1. Telehealth complements, it doesn’t replace. Remote sessions remove time pressure, reduce the “frozen in the consult room” effect, and let clinicians tailor plans to the caregiver’s reality—then loop back to the primary vet for exams and prescribing.
2. Framework over “fix.” OA management isn’t a one-step recipe; start with weight, daily life changes, and clear priorities, then add/adjust analgesia and adjuncts based on response.
3. Measure what matters. Pair an owner’s unique pain indicators with a validated tool like the Canine Brief Pain Inventory to track severity, interference with activities, and quality of life over time. Expect scores to spark useful conversations, not just produce a “number.”
4. Lower the stress to raise the care. For reactive or anxious dogs, remote guidance can be a lifeline; it builds caregiver confidence and plans for low-stress vet visits (timing, ramps, car setups) before the next in-person appointment.
5. Plan for flares and continuity. Set expectations that flare-ups happen, agree an analgesic “flare plan” in advance, and keep the same clinician(s) involved so owners feel heard and supported across visits.
Relevant Links:
Get Support Through Teleguidance
Whether you’re feeling overwhelmed with options or just want a clear, step-by-step plan for your dog’s osteoarthritis care, our teleguidance team is here to help. You’ll receive personalised advice you can take straight back to your own vet—without leaving home.
Find out more: https://caninearthritisteleguidance.co.uk
Chronic Pain Symposium On-Demand
Missed the live event? Watch all lectures anytime through the Education Centre and level up your OA toolkit.
Access now: https://www.cameducation.co.uk/
Join the CAM Member Zone
Get ongoing support, templates, webinars, and Q&As to manage canine OA more confidently.
Join here: https://www.caninearthritis.co.uk/member-zone/
Learn more about CAM:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CAMarthritis
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/canine_arthritis
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CanineArthritisManagement
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/canine-arthritis-management-ltd
Have questions send them to: [email protected]
Stay tuned to learn how early detection can make a significant difference in managing OA in younger dogs.
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