Dr. Kendra Pope is a board-certified veterinary oncologist. Significantly, she is one of only four integrative veterinary oncologists in the US. Dr. Pope’s clinic is located in Tinton Falls, NJ – and pet owners seek her expertise from all over the US.
Being an integrative veterinary oncologist, Dr. Pope doesn’t just focus on treatment of pet cancer. She as well focuses on prevention – not only prevention of a pet’s cancer spreading, but prevention of cancer in the first place.
From her experience, Dr. Pope has developed a pet cancer prevention course. From the course description: “Within the course content, you will be provided with an in-depth questionnaire that will generate a score out of 100 for your pet. This score will be used to determine your pet’s cancer risk. It will allow you to identify areas in your pet’s life that are weaknesses and may be contributing to their risk of cancer without you even knowing it! This scorecard can be used on any pet, at any time, over and over, as you modify and change your pet’s lifestyle choices.“
“Once you understand your pet’s score from the Scorecard, you will then be provided with both BASIC and ADVANCED techniques to address these areas of weakness and correct them for good! Access to products, tools, supplements and even diagnostic tests that will dive deep into underlying causes will be provided.“
The cost of the course: $1795 or 3 payments of $650 each.
The course will only be available from May 15 – June 2, 2024 and will not be offered again until Spring 2025.
Click Here to learn more about this pet cancer prevention course.
Personal Note about Dr. Pope: I’ve had the pleasure of hearing Dr. Pope speak and the pleasure of ‘hanging out’ with her at Dr. Laurie Coger’s Healthy Dog Expo. She is the type of veterinarian that I am honored to know and be friends with. When you listen to her speak, you are in awe of her knowledge and experience. She takes a difficult topic (cancer in pets) and turns it into something exciting to learn more about – in my opinion because of the prevention and integration of ‘outside the norm’ treatment methods (such as a focus on good nutrition). She’s not a ‘let’s throw a pill at the problem’ type of veterinarian. She’s special.
Wishing you and your pet(s) the best,
Susan Thixton
Pet Food Safety Advocate
Author Buyer Beware, Co-Author Dinner PAWsible
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kruzingwithk9s
May 15, 2024 at 12:59 pm
Nice but the average person (and especially with todays world and higher costs and people losing their jobs) cannot afford this.
Felicity Harvey
May 15, 2024 at 1:00 pm
Is the price per dog?
Laurie Coger
May 15, 2024 at 2:11 pm
I would also point out that Dr. Pope is an advocate for fresh food diets.
The course is a huge collection of knowledge, and students will have lifetime access. And of course, the principles and content can be applied to multiple dogs.
Cindy L Busch
May 15, 2024 at 3:26 pm
I’m really disappointed that this course is so expensive. I will not be able to participate. I really wonder what the real goal is… at this price I think it is to make money. Like human medicine only the rich have access to first class care and education.
Manuela Perlini
May 28, 2024 at 12:36 pm
Would be nice, but it’s expensive
Rox
May 15, 2024 at 5:44 pm
No doubt crucial and valuable information in that course. However, that price would take my veterinary budget (money set aside just for vet care) for an entire year or more. I’m all for online learning for experts. However, passing on this one. It is becoming more and more evident as the years go by that veterinarians (especially the experts) wish only to have very wealthy clients and some even hint that if you can’t afford whatever it is they are selling then you should not have a dog. I call it the Barbaro Effect after the racehorse that broke down and a team of veterinarians put him through eight surgeries under general anesthesia each time and then whined about how the darn horse just refused to live (hint: he did not die of his racetrack injury). Ask any horse vet about Barbaro it will clue you as to how vets started thinking about charging what they believe the traffic will “bear.”