Clinic-In-A-Box done for you with protocols, staff & patient education, waivers and how to market. The complete clinical foundation course in ozonated glycerin (OG) for licensed veterinarians. Self-paced. Evidence-based. Built so the doctor who finishes can treat their first OG patient the week they finish the course.
By the end of this course you will be fully equipped to implement OG into your veterinary practice across every clinical route currently in use — oral, topical, nebulizing, subcutaneous and intralesional injectables, intra-articular (PROG), intraperitoneal, and intravenous — with the protocols, handouts, owner consent waivers, fee schedule, phone scripts, and practice-launch playbook to run an OG service line on Monday morning.
A self-paced, on-demand course for practicing doctors of veterinary medicine. It provides the foundational ozone knowledge required to practice ozonated glycerin (OG) safely, then teaches every OG application currently in clinical veterinary use.
OG is a stable, slow-release form of ozone — pharmaceutical-grade glycerin infused with ozone gas, with a 90-day room-temperature half-life. It is what Dr. Bridge has built his 400+ case veterinary practice on over the past seven years, and it is what this course is designed to put into your hands.
"What you are about to learn is not miracle medicine. It is a useful, safe, adaptable therapy that belongs in the toolbox of any clinician who takes integrative medicine seriously."
Dr. Jim Bridge, DVM, CVA, FAAO · Module 1, Lesson 1.1
Licensed veterinarians (DVM, VMD, BVSc and equivalents) in any species or practice type — small animal, equine, mixed, livestock, exotics — who want a clinically rigorous regenerative-medicine modality they can actually run on Monday.
Integrative and holistic vets who already use modalities like acupuncture, chiropractic, herbal, or PRP, and want to add a stable, safe, evidence-supported ozone delivery system to the toolkit.
Conventionally-trained vets who keep running into chronic and refractory cases — splenic hemangiosarcoma, EPM, stubborn dermatologic disease, osteoarthritis, non-healing wounds, refractory periodontal disease — where conventional pharmacy has run out of options and the client is asking what else is possible.
Practice owners building a regenerative or palliative-care service line and wanting a complete clinical-plus-business curriculum, not just a clinical CE.
Vets who already do ozone gas therapy and want to add OG — different formulation, different handling discipline, different indications — to expand the modalities they offer.
We are deliberate about scope. This course is not designed for, and does not authorize, use by:
Pet owners, lay caregivers, or home users. The protocols, dose ranges, and consent frameworks in this course are veterinary-specific and assume the prescribing authority and clinical judgment of a licensed DVM.
Physicians, dentists, or human health practitioners. A separate Health Practitioner course is in development for those scopes of practice.
Anyone looking for an ozone-gas course. Insufflation (rectal, vaginal, aural), minor and major autohemotherapy, ozone bagging, and ozone saunas are not taught here — those are a different modality with their own equipment, safety profile, and evidence base.
Anyone looking for an ozonated-oils course. Ozonated olive, jojoba, and other carrier-oil formulations are a different chemistry with a different stability profile and different indications.
Practitioners hoping to make OG in-clinic. Producing injectable-grade OG requires concentration testing, contamination control, and stability verification outside this course's scope. We assume you'll source OG commercially. Module 7 covers sourcing, peroxide testing, the no-metal rule, and clinic storage in depth.
Thirteen modules across three sequential arcs, including using OG with DMSO. Each module unlocks one per week; lessons unlock sequentially within a module; end-of-module knowledge checks help you prepare for the certification exam.
Module 1 — Welcome, Scope, Practice Database, OGPro Learning Objectives, three-gate certification pathway, legal framework with practitioner-responsibility acknowledgment.
Module 2 — What OG Is: molecular structure, the time-release carrier mechanism, the 90-day half-life, stability profile, the no-metal rule (iron, silver, platinum).
Module 3 — Mechanism of Action: hormetic oxidative stress, Nrf2 pathway activation, cytokine modulation, antimicrobial spectrum, the Warburg effect and tumor-cell susceptibility.
Module 4 — The Glycocalyx, Endothelial Function and OG: the upstream lesion behind chronic inflammatory disease and OG's biological rationale.
Module 5 — The 140-year clinical lineage: Marchand 1885 → Shiota 2001 → Okamoto 2018 → contemporary North American practice.
Module 6 — The Japanese Research Evidence Base: Mediplus Pharma, Showa University, and Tottori University — twenty-five years of primary-source skin, hard-tissue, hemostatic, and antimicrobial studies.
Every clinical route currently in veterinary OG practice, taught against a single reusable 11-point clinical-protocol framework.
Module 7 — Sourcing, Testing & Storage. How to source quality OG, the peroxide test-strip protocol, batch logging, the no-metal discipline, the three-zone clinic storage protocol.
Module 8 — OG by Route I: Topical (10–100% with optional DMSO adjunct), Oral (1 mL per 10 lb BID), Nebulizer and Nasal Spray, Livestock applications, and Veterinary Dental (socket infusion, sinus flushing, periodontal application, owner home rinse).
Module 9 — OG by Route II (first injectable module): Subcutaneous Circle the Dragon for peritumoral application, Paralumbar 5% for back and neck soft tissue, mechanical Lipoma Maceration, and the 3:3:3:1 Prolozone-with-OG (PROG) joint injection protocol.
Module 10 — OG by Route III, Hospital-Based: Intraperitoneal OG (5% in warm saline, linea-alba approach), Intravenous OG (2.5% buffered, with the EPM gold-standard protocol), and Local Infusions (bladder Foley, equine uterine AI pipette). Includes warming, sedation, monitoring, and emergency-response discipline.
Module 11 — OG & DMSO. When and how to add DMSO to topical and injectable OG protocols, with full safety and ratio reference cards.
Prepares you to actually run OG in your clinic and earn the credential.
Module 12 — Building a Successful OG Practice. Pricing philosophy, fee-schedule template, team operations, weekly case rounds, the 30-second elevator pitch, the five most common owner objections with scripted responses, the 6-step Marketing & Education Flywheel, the no-claims discipline, the 60-minute community seminar framework, and the colleague-referral playbook.
Module 13 — Capstone & Certification Cases. Submission of five case studies from your own practice across at least three indications, reviewed by Dr. Bridge or an OGPro Clinical Advisor.
OG practice is a documentation discipline as much as a clinical one. The course ships with the operational paperwork already drafted, formatted, and ready to brand:
Owner consent and waiver forms — separate sheets for non-injectable, injectable (Module 9), and hospital-based IP/IV/local-infusion (Module 10) procedures
Owner-facing handouts for every route — written to go home in the discharge folder
Quick-reference dosing cards and dilution calculators (oral, topical, nebulizer, SQ, paralumbar, PROG, IP, IV, local infusion, DMSO ratios)
Procedure protocols printable for the clinic OG binder
Clinic storage protocol and peroxide testing log
Case study submission templates and the rubric they're scored against
Fee-schedule template with regional adjustment ranges
Phone-script template, elevator-pitch card, and the 60-minute community seminar framework
Staff role cards for the OG-running clinic team
The Story
In 2018, Dr. Jim Bridge attended the American Academy of Ozone Therapy conference in Las Vegas. Dr. Toshikazu Okamoto of Tottori University, Japan, was presenting on ozonated water and cancer. The room was expecting more of the same — and it was the same — until the last two slides.
Those last two slides showed an ozone gel with a 90-day half-life at room temperature. A stable, deliverable, slow-release form of ozone — something the clinical ozone field had been looking for for over a hundred years.
Bridge cornered Dr. Okamoto after the talk to learn that Dr. Okamato was bubbling ozone through pharmaceutical-grade glycerin. Bridge went home and figured out how to make it.
Seven years and 400+ documented cases later — including a published 24-case canine hemangiosarcoma series with an average 18-month quality-of-life outcome, and the DePaulo/D'Amanda Ataxic Horse Trial in which 70 of 70 horses recovered from EPM with three IV OG doses — Bridge sat down with Pam Holloway, RN, MS, and asked the obvious next question: how do we get this into other vets' hands without losing the discipline that makes it safe?
This course is the answer. Pam founded the OGPro Collaborative in 2025 to serve as the certification body. Bridge teaches the clinical content. Together they built a thirteen-module curriculum, every protocol drawn from the actual chart of an actual practice, every consent form drafted by clinicians who have used it on a Monday morning, every dose tested before it appears in a lesson.
To establish OG as a trusted, evidence-based tool — uniting physicians, dentists, veterinarians, and health innovators to pioneer oxygen-based healing worldwide.
These are the outcomes the course is taught from.
in Dr. Bridge's seven-year veterinary practice — the largest systematic clinical OG experience in North American veterinary medicine.
with a documented 18-month average quality-of-life outcome — the case behind Module 10's IP OG protocol.
70 of 70 horses recovered from EPM with three IV OG doses, compared with approximately 1 in 8 rideable on conventional antiprotozoal therapy.
from Mediplus Pharma, Showa University, and Tottori University — the dermatologic, mechanistic, and stability evidence Module 6 walks you through paper by paper.
Modules unlock at a pace of one per week until AASVB RACE Certification is awarded. The reading content across 13 modules is roughly 18–22 hours total. The five-case certification submissions depend on the veterinarian's cases in their clinic. The pace of courses opening will increase after AASVB RACE Certification is received. The slower pace is to provide veterinarians who are going through the course the benefit of getting the CE's.
Course Complete means you finished all 13 modules and passed all 13 knowledge checks. A Certificate of Completion is available on request. It's a completion marker, not a credential.
OGPro Certified Veterinary OG Practitioner is the credential. It requires Course Complete plus a 50-question cumulative Final Exam (≥80%, three attempts) plus five case studies submitted from your own practice across at least three indications, reviewed by Dr. Bridge or an OGPro reviewer.
No. The course is designed to take a veterinarian with zero prior ozone experience to first-OG-patient confidence. If you do have prior ozone-gas training, the Module 2 chemistry and Module 7 sourcing/handling content will still be new — OG has handling discipline that ozone gas does not.
OG is administered by the prescribing veterinarian under your existing licensure. The course teaches what Dr. Bridge does, what the published literature supports, and what common practice looks like; it does not substitute for your regulatory, clinical, or ethical obligations under your state's veterinary practice act, the federal extra-label drug use framework (AMDUCA, 21 CFR 530), or your professional standards. Module 1 walks through the legal framework and the practitioner-responsibility acknowledgment in detail.
This course is being submitted to the American Association of Veterinary State Boards (AAVSB) Registry of Approved Continuing Education (RACE) for 18–20 CE credit hours. RACE-approved CE is recognized for license renewal in jurisdictions that accept AAVSB RACE approval — which is most U.S. states and Canadian provinces. Confirm your jurisdiction's specific requirements with your veterinary board.
Not from this course. Producing injectable-grade OG requires concentration testing, contamination control, and stability verification that sit outside the course's scope. We teach you to source it correctly, test it on receipt, store it discipline-fully, and use it precisely. Module 7 is dedicated to that whole chain.
Different modality, different course. Ozone gas therapy has its own equipment, safety profile, technique library, and evidence base. This course is OG only. We are deliberate about scope so the teaching and safety discipline both stay sharp.
Different formulation, different course. Ozonated olive, jojoba, and other carrier oils have different stability profiles and different indications. This course covers ozonated glycerin only.
7-day refund from purchase date.
The course price is $995 until AAVSB RACE approval is awarded. Practitioners enrolled in the course at the time RACE approval is granted will receive their 18–20 RACE CE credits at no additional cost. Course price increases to $1,595 once AASVB RACE approval is awarded.
No. Certified practitioners join the OGPro Practice Database — a de-identified case-pattern review, an ongoing community channel, and a colleague-referral network. The collaborative bargain is simple: submit your cases (the ones that worked, the ones that didn't, the ones that surprised you), and OGPro feeds the aggregate findings back to the community as the curriculum evolves.
The course was built so the doctor who finishes it can treat their first OG patient the week they finish. That is the bar. If that is the bar you want to meet, this is the course built for it.