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Elise+Hudson

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Posts posted by Elise+Hudson

  1. What fantastic news about the parvo test! He may have coronavirus perhaps, which still knocks them a little, but not anything like parvo.

    He is just so adorable.. I can see why so many people want to bring him home.

    I struggle with this at work all the time when I see the rspca animals come through, or the strays =)

  2. Yay on getting to start running with Esky! I know I have a long time to wait, but I need to lose a bit of weight for myself anyway. I have walked/run friends dogs in the past and it gives you a purpose for running, your right - I feel a bit dumb sometimes just running when I am obviously not a runner, I am very unfit!

  3. Well I have now started running again! I think partly to try and keep myself busy until I can spend all my puppy time getting everything ready! I have been telling myself I have to be fit enough for when I can eventually run my dog - I know that will be a long time, but I am enjoying myself!

  4. Sounds quite a bit like demotex mites. They can be sometimes difficult to find on skin scrapings especially if you only have a small area to scrape. It is much more common to get demodex lesions on younger dogs, not so much in older which may be why only one is showing signs.

    I would discuss this possibility with your vet. :)

  5. Just a quick question for you - are you flying with Quantas or Virgin? I am just curious about how much it costs to fly a dog in a crate bigger than their 'medium size' - Size: 66cm in length / 40cm wide / 52cm in height Maximum weight (including pet) : 20 kg

    I will be wanting to fly with my dog in the future, just curious about the costs.

  6. It is doing a great job of killing of the wildlife here, all the poor birds are eating the baited grain!

    :( :( :(

    I know its absolutely terrible. My life seems to revolve around rat bait at the moment and I must say I am way more than over it. I can't wait until this plague comes under control. :(

  7. We have a puppy preschool that runs out of the front reception area of our vet clinic. The entire place is cleaned down with F10 before the class. I think a puppy preschool at the vets wound be the same risk than going in for your regular vaccinations.

  8. Hey guys - secondary poisoning definitely does happen! We have been having on average 1-2 dogs a day affected with poisoning and around half of those have no direct access to the baits.

    The zinc phosphide baits are horrible! If your dog or cat gets a tiny piece of this they can die, and there isn't a heap us vets can do to help - often they don't even make it into the vet clinic after eating it. And there is not a heap known about the secondary poisoning form this - I wouldn't risk it though, it is just too dangerous. And you are right - this poison is only registered for rural use and should not be used in town or even around sheds/buildings.

    It is doing a great job of killing of the wildlife here, all the poor birds are eating the baited grain!

  9. I don't think it is the best of a bad situation though, I think it does contribute to an ugly side of veterinary practice. I know exactly why the phrase 'they are going to die anyway' sits badly with RottnBullies, it sits badly with me too because I've seen hints of it with vets treating my animals. Basically throwing in the towel because they are pretty much knocking on deaths door. It's going to die anyway so why bother wasting time and money figuring out what's wrong with it? Many vets I've dealt with over the years have had this demeanor, maybe it's their experience maybe it's their training but I do think that it's an issue which is often ignored and IMO needs further investigation.

    To me it's not the welfare of these animals as people are so quick to point out, they will die anyway, however the toll on our young, learning veterinary students where they learn that 'oh well it's going to die anyway so make sure you don't cry or have any moral objections to it because that means you're just too damn soft and namby pamby to be a vet!!!', well that's a different story altogether. A vet tech student had an objection to a dissection experiment and was told by the lecturer "how are you going to be a vet tech if you can't handle that?!" (said with a certain amount of scorn and contempt), the problem is that people seem to think that a moral objection to something is somehow a sign of weakness. Excessive desensitisation is something I have a real problem with, we want vets to be hardened about death while training yet we want them to be sensitive and understanding while treating our own pets? Can you see how this would create a conflicting set of ethical values?

    I strongly dissagree that this hardens veterinary students or veterinarians against death. I for one will never forget those dogs I learnt from during my training.

    I also think it is a bad generalisation that we see 'dogs on deaths door' and don't care because it 'will die anyway'. It is a sad fact of my job that some animals will die no matter what I do to try and save them, but one of the greatest joys you can have as a veterinarian is have a dog come into you 'on deaths door', find out what is wrong and do your very best to help it.

    I think you will find that is why the majority of veterinarians work in the industry - not because we are hardened and don't bother with our very sick patients.

  10. I just find this all so ridiculous.

    There are thousand of dogs sitting in kennels for years...they are saved from Euthanasia......I don't agree, they live a life of constant stress and isolation.

    When most dogs go to the vets, it is stressful, no matter what the reason, bit like me at the dentist.

    Dogs don't know if they are there to have life saving surgery, a vaccination or something else, its all the same experience.

    I think it's great that student vets get to work on live animals, I know when they treat my dog they have already experienced all the things that are life saving, watching bleeding, blood pressure, aneasthetic depth, etc.

    I think these poor dogs that are already on death row are doing our lucky dogs a great service, they are under GA, so they know nothing, I am sure they are getting loved and kissed by the students, and crossing to the rainbow bridge in loving arms at the end, where they where already going to go.

    This is a problem for responsible dog ownership, if people did the right thing, these dogs wouldn't be on the euthanasia list:)

    As a newly graduated veterinarian who myself was lucky enough to benefit from these wonderful dogs we had for our non-recovery surgeries I can assure you that these dogs were firstly treated with the utmost respect. We allocated half an hour before even pre-medicating the dogs to walking them, cuddling them and generally just being friends with them - giving them all of our attention. How many dogs at the pound have 4 loving people cuddling them in the hours before they are euthanased?

    From a veterinary standpoint I cannot even begin to explain the amount of knowledge I gained through the use of dogs for these surgeries. We learnt huge amounts about anaesthesia, as we were able to be monitored while completing the whole anaesthetic from start to finish. We also learnt alot about the importance of blood pressure and how to monitor this successfully during surgery, but I think the very most important thing we learnt is how to ensure that we are tying off our knots and such well to prevent bleeding. A surgery which may sound as simple as a 'spey' takes alot of practice from a veterinary student and there are also things that can go wrong. These surgeries allow us to practice all of this, so that if we have a bleeder in our first week out in practice (even though we should have someone supervising) these is no stress - we have done it before. I can't tell you how much of a relief it is to know this. (And surely as a dog/cat owner bringing your animal to the vet this would have to make you feel more comfortable than the chance your pet might be the new vet's very first surgery.)

    These surgeries are never going to go by without controversy in the news and the general public, although I do honestly feel that if people knew the full story - from the pound/shelter to the vet schools, this would be much less than we see now.

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