Biographical Sketch for Robin Downing, DVM Since graduating from the College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Illinois at ChampaignUrbana in 1986, Dr. Downing has been blazing her own trail within veterinary medicine. As the first woman veterinarian for a 100-mile radius in Worland, Wyoming, Dr. Downing brought sophisticated companion animal medicine into the homes of pet lovers. In 1991, Dr. Downing purchased Windsor Veterinary Clinic, a stagnant practice in small-town Colorado. Achieving American Animal Hospital Association accreditation in 1994, Windsor Veterinary Clinic, PC, was named one of the first ten Practice of Excellence Award® winners in the United States that same year. Her practice was featured in the January 1995 issue of Veterinary Economics® Magazine. Dr. Downing is also committed to personal excellence. She was the 1995 Colorado VMA’s Up and Coming Veterinarian of the Year, and the 1996 Association for Women Veterinarians’ Outstanding Woman Veterinarian of the Year. In 1999 she received a regional Entrepreneurial Excellence Award® from Working Woman® Magazine, and was named the Hill’s Animal Welfare and Humane Ethics Award winner for the year 2000. In 2001 the World Small Animal Association presented Dr. Downing the Excellence in Veterinary Healthcare Award (Small Animal Veterinarian of the Year). Dr. Downing is an outspoken advocate of the precious nature of the Family-Pet Bond when the pet faces special challenges like chronic illness, cancer, or a physical disability and presented this topic to a pet-loving audience at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. Dr. Downing is a pain management consultant and lectures internationally on the importance of pre-emptive pain management in the compassionate care of companion animals. Dr. Downing is a regular contributing author to Veterinary Economics® and FirstLine®. She has been a featured weekly columnist in the Denver Post®, answering the questions of concerned pet owners. She authored a selection in Chicken Soup for the Pet Lover’s Soul®, and in 2000 finished a book for animal owners whose pets have cancer, Pets Living With Cancer: A Pet Owner’s Resource, published by the American Animal Hospital Association Press and translated into Dutch. Dr. Downing has been quoted in such popular magazines as Cat Fancy, Dog Fancy, and Reader’s Digest as well as in many newspapers around the United States. Dr. Downing is a trustee for the Morris Animal Foundation. She is an affiliate faculty member at Colorado State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine, and is Past President of the International Veterinary Academy of Animal Pain Management. Dr. Downing is one of a handful of veterinarians in the world to hold the Diplomate credential in the American Academy of Pain Management, the largest interdisciplinary pain management organization in human medicine. She is also credentialed as a Certified Canine Rehabilitation Practitioner, having trained at the University of Tennessee College of Veterinary Medicine, and is also certified in Veterinary Acupuncture. Dr. Downing shares her home with eleven cats, three dogs, and a cockatiel—all castoffs, slated for euthanasia or abandonment—but all thriving within a microcosm of unconditional love. Abstract for Robin Downing, DVM Title of Presentation: Pharmacology in Multi-modal Pain Management for the Veterinary Hospice Patient As Christine Longaker, influential in the human hospice movement, has stated, “Pain is inevitable; suffering is optional.” Veterinary hospice patients need and deserve to be comfortable enough to “live until they die” and to enjoy the time they have left with their human companions. A pet owner’s greatest fear is that a beloved pet will suffer, whether we are addressing the acute pain of a surgery or the chronic pain of osteoarthritis. Pet owners’ anxiety about their pets is at its greatest as we approach the end of an animal’s life. This presentation will focus on the need to take a multi-modal approach to managing pain at the end of life. Participants will learn how to construct a multi-modal pain management plan for hospice patients. Special attention will be paid to articulating newer applications of available medications. There will be discussion of potential adverse effects as well as how best to respond. Veterinarians and their health care teams can and should work with clients to keep veterinary hospice patients comfortably in their homes for as long as possible.