Protection from ticks, fleas and mites can save your pets from a whole range of serious health conditions and prevent infestations and infection of humans too.
Book an appointment today to get your pet checked for external parasites and for the vet’s recommendation on what to give your pet for ticks, fleas and mites.
What external parasite control does your pet need?
Preventative treatment against ticks, fleas and skin mites kills these parasites and also prevents them from returning to bite your pets. Keep your pets’ treatment up to date with spot-on or tablet treatments every three months.
Why use tick and flea medication on your pet?
Preventative control of ticks, fleas and mites with medication can prevent:
- flea allergy dermatitis
- demodectic mange
- sarcoptic mange
- otodectic mange (ear mites)
- canine babesiosis (tick fever/biliary)
- feline babesiosis
- canine ehrlichiosis (tick bite fever)
- feline mycoplasmosis (infectious anaemia)
When should pets be treated for ticks and fleas?
Each preventative medicine will have its own schedule, but long-term treatments are usually valid for around three months (12 weeks). Confirm your pet’s dosing schedule with the vet.
Learn more
For more information about external parasites, read about: