Philip H. Kass
University of California, Davis
639 Papers
3.6K Citations
Philip H. Kass is an academic researcher from University of California, Davis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 621 publications. Previous affiliations of Philip H. Kass include Hebrew University of Jerusalem & University of Pretoria.
Chat about Author
Papers
Adverse birth outcomes associated with open dumpsites in Alaska Native Villages.
Susan Gilbreath,Philip H. Kass +1 more
TL;DR: This retrospective cohort study evaluated adverse birth outcomes in infants whose birth records indicated maternal residence in villages containing dumpsites potentially hazardous to health and environment in Alaska Native villages, finding no differences in incidence across exposure levels for other outcomes.
47
A retrospective study of acute kidney injury in cats and development of a novel clinical scoring system for predicting outcome for cats managed by hemodialysis.
TL;DR: Models can provide objective guidance in assessing AKI prognosis and severity, but should be validated in other cohorts of cats.
46
Comparative vaccine-specific and other injectable-specific risks of injection-site sarcomas in cats.
TL;DR: This case-control study measuring temporal and spatial exposures efficiently detected associations between administrations of various types of vaccines and other injectable products with sarcoma development without the need to directly measure incidence.
Pharmacokinetics of butorphanol tartrate in red-tailed hawks (Buteo jamaicensis) and great horned owls (Bubo virginianus).
Shannon M. Riggs,Michelle G. Hawkins,Arthur L. Craigmill,Philip H. Kass,Scott D Stanley,Ian T. Taylor +5 more
TL;DR: In RTHs and GHOs, butorphanol was rapidly absorbed and distributed via all routes of administration; the drug's rapid terminal half-life indicated that published dosing intervals for birds may be inadequate in R THs andGHOs.
44
An observational study of the relationship between Capacity for Care as an animal shelter management model and cat health, adoption and death in three animal shelters.
TL;DR: Applying the C4C management system gave each organization an optimal average daily shelter cat population target and helped each shelter to increase the size of their feline housing units, suggesting that implementation of this management model could help other shelters achieve similar results.
44