Yesterday, I received a phone call from a dear client. He left a message that referred to one of his two cats, a sweet kitty I’d been treating for early geriatric issues over the past year. So when I returned his call, I asked brightly, “How is Mr. Kitty?”
“Don’t you remember? You euthanized him in February!”
Omigod. He was right, of course. It all came rushing back—a few seconds too late. Pardon me while I take a few moments to take my foot out of my mouth and get that heart-sinking feeling out of my chest.
“I know you see a lot of patients, Doctor, don’t worry about it.”
Too late. I had committed the cardinal sin of forgetting something so incredibly important to this one human being that he was calling back, months later, to discuss the issue some more.
It’s one thing when a client approaches us in a restaurant and says, “Fluffy’s doing so well! Thank you so much!” Although I may not remember Fluffy one bit there are plenty of reasons why that might happen. Not only do I see a lot of Fluffies, I have a hard time connecting people in odd places (like a restaurant) to their pets in the office. That makes some sense to me. And I can usually play it off—“I’m so glad she’s doing great! We’ll see you soon, right?’
It was a lot tougher on the phone after I’d fully digested my foot.
What’s worse, this client was calling to clue me in on a potential diagnosis I’d totally missed. Mr. Kitty had died of kidney disease after a slow-burn case of confusing symptoms. And he’d been eating recalled pet foods that whole time. Because the recall happened about a month after he died, I never made the connection. But his owner did—albeit long after the fact.
I guess I had already processed Mr. Kitty’s death—emotionally and professionally. And because our computer system has no means by which we can research cases by diagnosis, any old or recent cases of renal failure never got re-investigated. They sort of fell into a black hole into which we relied on owner recall for retraction.
This owner had been so torn up about his cat’s death that Mr. Kitty should have stuck in my head somehow. But it hadn’t. I’m not only disgusted with myself for this egregious memory lapse, I’m thoroughly aggrieved that I hadn’t followed up on one of the more questionable cases of kidney failure I’d seen this year. Bad bad bad.
I thought I’d experienced enough stress and heartache from the recall to last me a good, long while. Now I know it’s not over yet—not by a long shot. Not while there’s any lingering doubt over whether there are any more unsolved cases in my “dead files.” And not now that I have to think on how it is that my euthanasia-addled brain can manage to forget a patient I cared for so much that I cried at his passing.
It feels somewhat hypocritical to me (at some base level) that I could feel so much then forget so quickly. OK so maybe it’s not hypocrisy. Maybe it’s really about this thing they call compassion fatigue. Either way, it feels bad—really bad. And not the least because Mr. Kitty’s father will certainly never understand that—not if I have such a hard time with it.
So I’m left to think practically (dwelling on anything else is just mental masturbation at this point):
Now that Mr. Kitty’s story has been dug out of our paper filing system, he’s one less unaddressed case to answer for. Sure, I feel better about that. But human memory being what it is, I’ve resolved to go paperless—as soon as I can manage to convince the powers that be that a more robust computer system has merits beyond the storage space it saves.
We’re only human after all. And the use of tools to help solve problems is a big part of what defines our species. So I’m going to work on fixing the problem and stop kicking myself—as soon as I can manage to disgorge that stray foot of mine.
Add Comment8 Comments
That happened to me once, only I wasn't as forgiving about it as the vet I dealt with at that time was a a$$hole.
We had our doberman put down due to aggression issues and I got a card in the mail about a year later stating that she was over due for her yearly physical and shots. I called the hospital and reminded them that she was put down. The confused receptionist started to argue with me until she looked it up in the computer where it said "DECEASED" and the date that Anna was euthanized.
What made this particular ve such a a$$hole was that he had the bed side manner of a bear that was just coming out of hibernation, and when I asked what happened to animals that had a "country burial" as it's called here, he told me "They dig a big hole and dump them all in it!" I went to work that evening literally byside myself and found out that no, they don't just dig a big hole and dump all the bodies in them.
i will never forget that as long as I live and I've had more than my share of pet deaths over the past two days. Oreo died sometime Thursday night / Friday morning. My vet says his heart just stopped beating at some point, but that didn't make me feel any better when I woke up to a dead cat at my side, especially since he was happy and purring when we went to bed.
Angel crashed on me yesterday so we had her put down.
Blech! Two pet loses in two days is a bit much. Nobody else is allowed to die or crash anytime soon.
Stacy June 3rd, 2007 09:06:00 AM
I <i> know </i>vets feel awful about these incidents when they happen -- and they will, because we're only human.
Last year at this time, I helped my brother take his boxer, Taz, to be euthanized after short fight with cancer. (Boxer = cancer) Taz became so sick so quickly, but his regular veterinarian was not working that day. So we went to mine, because I knew Dr. Bill and his staff would be good to my brother, who'd never been through this before.
Later that day, I called the other vet's practice and let them know, because they like Joe and the were very fond of Taz. A couple days later, Joe got sympathy cards from BOTH practices.
He went in to the regular practice a couple days later, and his regular vet came out to greet him. "How's Taz?" she said. The staff hadn't told her! She felt awful, and it wasn't her fault at all.
I saw her a couple weeks ago -- one year after this incident -- and she told me how awful she felt about it. I assured her that Joe understood, and had no bad feelings. And she's still his vet, of course.
Gina Spadafori June 3rd, 2007 09:34:00 AM
Stacy- I'm so sorry for your loss!
As for not remembering- it happens. It does. Most clients won't hold it against you- we understand, sadly, that death is a part of life at a a vet office.
Trish June 3rd, 2007 12:21:00 PM
I think that many pet owners have a lot of compassion for the veterinarians who have to do the euthanasias -- I know I do. It's not a happy part of the job. So I'm OK with the idea that a vet might erase the memory of the act, intentionally or unintentionally. In fact, I might be glad that the vet remembered my pet as it was in happier days and forget about that last day.
Vets are people too.
Deanna June 4th, 2007 10:12:00 AM
The most important thing to me is that you are fully present and cognizant of the details about my pet while he or she is living. I don't expect the vet to remember every single animal some time later, even the difficult losses. I'd rather they save their energy for the ones they can still help! :)
Natalie June 4th, 2007 11:58:00 PM
Well, at least you didnt misdiagnose someone's cat with diabetes. Thats what happened to my Thumbs. Upon a visit to the vet one day a year before she died, she was misdiagnosed with diabetes. I didnt understand that her blood sugar levels were borderline (at best) and the vet insisted on keeping her for countless tests. He sent me home with strict orders to jab her twice a day with insulin. It killed me to do it, but I thought she was diabetic. As time went on, she got worse and worse. We tested at different vets offices and her sugar was fine but every time we went to THIS particular vets office her sugar would shoot straight up! What? I couldn't understand it. How did she have insulin that morning only to have outrageously high results before noon. She was stressed that was the answer. But I didn't have time to rectify that with her because one day while I was at work, I received a call from a family member telling me she was convulsing. She had been a little weird for the last few days (messing outside the litter box and such) and now she was convulsing. They rushed her to the pet ER where we found out what was truly wrong with my aged cat. She had myelomalacia and it was killing her fast. I had no other choice but to put her to sleep. Why didn't her vet who insisted on seeing her every 2 weeks near the end of her life check for that? I'll tell you why! I had one of those stupid pet health insurance plans with a very big pet chain (If you're really smart, you can guess which one it is) and the vet who worked their was the proprietor of that particular clinic and the insurance policies. I found out after Thumbs' death that it would have cost him a lot off of his cut to offer Thumbs the scans that could saved her a lot of agony.
I say all of that to say that I TRULY understand what pet owners must feel like after losing their beloved pets to bad pet food. Because pets aren't given the proper respect that they should be given as family members, outsiders don't understand how angry the pet owner might be. I know I felt like a crime victim after poking Thumbs with insulin 2x a day for a year. I can't even imagine how angry the pet owners are out there and I empathize with everyone of them. A lawsuit will not give them their pets back. Food manufacturers should be criminally and civilly investigated for what they have done. They cut corners and in effect took the joy out of many people's lives.
Wendy June 5th, 2007 11:18:00 PM
wendy i am just so very sorry for you. i work for a large national pet supply store in the grooming department, and yes, just steps away is a vet. practice that rents space in many many stores of this chain.
this hospital, whose name i cannot mention, as i could be sued/fired, starts with the 2nd letter of the alphabet and ends with the 4th. those who figure it out earn the following nugget of knowledge:
in the salon, we NEVER refer to that vet. we send everyone to a small hospital up the street. why? they care more about the money than the animals. period. i wouldnt take my cats there IF THEY WERE DYING.
i'd rather allow them to pass at home, in my lap, then risk the 'service' i hear about and witness day in and day out!
charity July 13th, 2007 06:46:00 AM
Indeed! That advice was a tough lesson learned for me. My new cats go to a local vet, one of many wonderful small vet practices in our area. One thing I learned after my experience with that awful big-chain vet "hospital" is that they willl never smile upon you wanting to take your pet anywhere else.
What do they have to hide?
I also learned an important lesson about pet medical insurance. It is better to have the kind where you pay up front and get reimbursed than to get a discount at the check-out counter. My new pet health insurance gives me the liberty to go to any vet that I want!
Wendy July 13th, 2007 07:20:00 AM
Add Commment