Study finds canine pacemaker crowdfunding rarely hits goals: full analysis
Crowdfunding doesn't appear to be a reliable backstop for dogs that need pacemaker implantation. In a new Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association study, Mark Rishniw analyzed GoFundMe campaigns created to help pay for canine pacemakers and found that these campaigns infrequently reached their fundraising targets, using a definition of success of at least 80% of the stated goal. (spectrumcare.pet)
The finding lands in a part of veterinary medicine where both urgency and cost matter. Pacemakers are used in dogs with clinically important slow-heart-rhythm disorders, and specialty cardiology centers describe the procedure as potentially lifesaving. But the financial burden is substantial: contemporary estimates from veterinary-facing and referral sources put typical total costs in roughly the mid-four- to low-five-figure range, depending on case complexity, hospitalization, and follow-up needs. (spectrumcare.pet)
Rishniw's study focused specifically on GoFundMe campaigns seeking help with canine pacemaker implantation. According to the abstract, the analysis evaluated campaign efficacy as the percentage of the target amount raised and campaign success as achieving at least 80% of the target, then examined whether factors such as target amount or campaign age were associated with the percentage raised. The headline conclusion was straightforward: these campaigns infrequently met fundraising targets. While the abstract snippet available publicly doesn't provide the full numeric breakdown, the result aligns with broader research and policy commentary suggesting crowdfunding is an uncertain safety net for medical-adjacent expenses. (spectrumcare.pet)
There is also useful context in how canine pacemaker care is delivered today. AAHA recently reported that many institutions have moved away from reused human pacemakers as pet-specific or new devices have become more available through channels such as CanPacers, which is sponsored by the ACVIM Cardiology subspecialty. That shift may improve device quality and logistics, but it doesn't remove the access problem for pet parents facing specialist fees, anesthesia, hospitalization, and follow-up care. (aaha.org)
Industry commentary around access to care helps explain why this matters beyond cardiology. AAHA's spectrum-of-care coverage has urged veterinary teams to avoid judgment when clients face financial constraints and to recognize that resources, values, and logistics all shape treatment decisions. In that context, a weak crowdfunding track record is important because it challenges a common assumption that social networks can reliably close the gap for advanced procedures. (aaha.org)
Why it matters: For general practitioners, emergency teams, and cardiology services, the study is a reminder that crowdfunding should probably be framed as a possible supplement, not a primary payment plan. If a dog with high-grade AV block or another pacemaker-responsive arrhythmia is deteriorating, waiting for an online campaign to gain traction may not be realistic. Earlier conversations about prognosis, referral timing, financing, pet insurance limitations, charitable support, and what spectrum-of-care options are actually feasible could help teams and pet parents make clearer decisions under pressure. That is partly an inference from the study's finding and the broader access-to-care literature, but it's a practical one. (spectrumcare.pet)
What to watch: The next question is whether this kind of evidence changes how practices talk about payment planning for specialty care, especially for urgent cardiology cases, and whether follow-on research quantifies which campaign features, client demographics, or referral pathways are linked with better or worse fundraising outcomes. (spectrumcare.pet)