ASPCA highlights year-round seasonal toxin risks for pets

ASPCA Poison Control’s Seasonal Toxins page packages year-round pet hazard guidance into one central resource, giving veterinary teams and pet parents a single reference point for the risks that tend to rise with changing weather, holidays, and outdoor activity. The resource spans winter, spring, summer, and fall, and points readers to common hazards ranging from holiday foods and décor to fleas, ticks, mushrooms, toxic plants, lawn products, and heat exposure. (aspca.org)

The update reflects a broader trend in companion animal toxicology messaging: many poison risks are seasonal, but highly predictable. ASPCA has published separate seasonal advisories over time, including spring safety guidance, fall hazard reminders, and holiday-specific materials. Those companion resources show how the organization has been building a calendar-based prevention strategy, rather than treating toxic exposures only as emergency events after they happen. (aspca.org)

The specifics vary by season. ASPCA’s materials flag winter holiday concerns such as chocolate, decorations, and seasonal plants; spring risks such as fleas, ticks, and toxic exposures during cleanup and gardening; and fall concerns including mushrooms and medications associated with seasonal illness. Earlier ASPCA summer safety guidance also called out insecticides, rodenticides, lawn products, and window-related trauma risks during warmer months. Together, the materials create a practical framework clinics can use to time prevention messaging throughout the year. (aspcapro.org)

Outside ASPCA, veterinary and poison-prevention groups are reinforcing similar themes. The AVMA said in an April 8, 2025, spring safety advisory that warmer weather brings risks including toxic plants and parasites. America’s Poison Centers also maintains seasonal poisoning prevention materials for summer, fall, winter, and spring, underscoring that seasonal exposures are a recurring public health issue, not just an animal health issue. That alignment matters because it suggests broad professional consensus on the need for timed, preventive communication. (avma.org)

Industry commentary has also focused on how seasonal toxicology guidance can support client education. In coverage from dvm360, Renee Schmid, DVM, DABT, DABVT, senior veterinary toxicologist and DVM supervisor at Pet Poison Helpline, discussed Halloween-related risks such as chocolate and raisins, framing the season as an opportunity for veterinary teams to communicate proactively with clients. AAHA has also recently circulated seasonal toxin materials developed with Pet Poison Helpline, including spring-focused guidance covering lilies, THC products, xylitol, azaleas, rodenticides, and de-icing salts. (dvm360.com)

Why it matters: For veterinary professionals, the story isn’t just that seasonal hazards exist. It’s that they’re cyclical, foreseeable, and well-suited to preventive workflows. Clinics can align reminders with the calendar: parasite prevention and garden toxins in spring, heat and outdoor chemical exposures in summer, mushrooms and holiday foods in fall and winter. That creates opportunities for more effective triage scripts, waiting-room education, technician talking points, and digital outreach that meets pet parents before an emergency visit is needed. ASPCA’s centralized resource may be especially useful for practices looking to standardize those conversations across the year. (aspca.org)

There’s also an operational angle. Poison-related calls and visits often spike around holidays and seasonal transitions, and ASPCApro explicitly notes that winter is a time when ASPCA Poison Control receives even more calls than normal. For hospitals, that means seasonal materials can do double duty: improving client awareness while helping teams prepare for predictable surges in questions about foods, plants, décor, pesticides, and household products. (aspcapro.org)

What to watch: The next step is likely not a regulatory action or product launch, but broader adoption of season-based toxicology communication, especially as clinics move through spring parasite season and into summer heat and lawn-care exposures. ASPCA, AVMA, and poison experts are all pointing in the same direction: prevention works best when it’s timely, specific, and repeated before the risk peaks. (aspca.org)

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