Vet P.O.V. See No Evil Hear No Evil: When Vet Hospitals Perform Procedures Behind Closed Doors

September 6th, 2006  

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HA, HA, HA Your last comment made me roll in the floor laughing!! How funny!!!!!!

Heather DVM September 6th, 2006 12:14:00 PM

Thank you! My vets are very good at accepting that I want to be there when things are done to my dogs. I know the backroom of the one clinic quite well. One of my dogs loves the backroom because usally cats are back there, and she loves to stare at cats. Other vets will do a lot of things in the exam room. My vets have even accepted my presence when my dogs were coming out of anesthesia, once I explain to them that I want to work the ears to help ease and speed the recovery.

I do love my vets!

kabbage September 7th, 2006 09:42:00 AM

Heather--check out the next post--you`ll love it.

Dr. Patty Khuly September 8th, 2006 07:03:00 PM

I've been perusing your blog and wanted you to know that I find it very interesting and disagree with a previous assessment that it's too negative.

I think it's a terribly difficult job. The gamut of pet owners from abusive and neglectful to overwrought hypochondriacs for their dogs and everything in between, the range of issues on which you must be expert, the painful outcomes of many cases... I couldn't do it, couldn't even think about doing it. And a compassionate and skillful vet is worth the weight of our whole house in gold.

It is difficult to be a vet patient's owner too. In twenty-five years of owning pets, I've experienced good vets and bad vets. In particular now, with a challenging diabetic dog, the quality of his veterinary care is especially important. From the pet owners' point of view, I do want to say that it is extremely difficult to evaluate the quality of the care being given and that does make me anxious, skeptical, and sometimes hesitant to authorize treatment. Even when I find a vet I think is good, if all goes well our need to work with that vet is sporadic and ideally for minor problems. I'm putting something incredibly precious to me in a stranger's hands and that is difficult to do.

As an example, I can remember very clearly taking a cat to a new vet for a smelly mouth. They cleaned her teeth and performed a feline leukemia test. When I picked up this apparently glossy and healthy cat who had a mouth problem, they informed me she had feline leukemia and sent me home with a death sentence and some vitamins.

I took her elsewhere and was told that, at the time, the in-house tests were difficult to do and that false positives were quite common and that it seemed unlikely given this cat's history and her othewise healthy state that she had leukemia. Ran a test that was sent to a professional lab and it came back negative. She lived until she was sixteen, passing from uncontrollable diabetes.

So if we seem anxious and unwilling to trust, please forgive us. For the good owners, it may be that we are just have limited tools for knowing if something so special to us is getting good care. I know I sometimes feel like I'm blowing things out of proportion if I go to the vet too early... it's just hard to know what to do.

Anyway, I love your blog.

Natalie September 9th, 2006 09:20:00 PM

Natalie: Thank you for the eloquent statement. I know it's hard to find a great vet. It's hard to find a great anything--physician, dentist, accountant, etc. But with our pets, as with our children, stress levels rise in choosing a good professional team. I sympathize. Thanks for the reminder.

Patty

Dr. Patty Khuly September 10th, 2006 12:50:00 PM

Oh I'm so glad my vet does everything in front of use except x-rays and then if the dog gets scared we come to the x-ray room. Never wanted to watch my baby go through surgery though. Nope don't want to see that. I couldn't handle it.

Emily September 10th, 2006 09:22:00 PM

I can't even watch my dog in surgery, much less perform it. No way. I turn into a blithering idiot whenever my dog gets sick. I let my boyfriend treat her.

Patty

Dr. Patty Khuly September 11th, 2006 02:27:00 PM

My experiences and those of my breeder friends (Anatolian Shepherd Dogs) here in California are that generally our vets are fine with us being present for nearly any procedure, including collection - except for surgery -- unless it's a prolonged whelping with a stuck puppy and a helping hand is needed. I think we actually appreciate when we are involved and can help. Our vets probably haven't had problems the required re-evaluating this policy. Maybe I know only the ones that appreciate the extra hands? I do know some inexperienced breeders that can get squicked (they don't have medical backgrounds generally) and will opt out unless there is a shortage of hands.

Semavi Lady September 15th, 2006 05:08:00 AM

Blu ray Ripper

gsze October 5th, 2009 11:53:16 AM

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