Originally posted by wtshnnfb01Well my other cat who we got declawed at the time had her paws poorly sewed up, and almost bleed to death. One is an accident. Two is shitty business practices.
Originally posted by wtshnnfb01Well my other cat who we got declawed at the time had her paws poorly sewed up, and almost bleed to death. One is an accident. Two is shitty business practices.
Originally posted by djrlewis[..]
Honest to God, I have no idea. It;s a cliche but I've wanted to do this since early school days. Never contemplated anything else. Definitely not a mechanic I'm afraid, I'm clueless with these things!!
Originally posted by Angel_or_Devil[..]
That must be cool, my career aspirations change every week, wish i had a vocation. A few more vet questions:
How do u treat fish? do u treat fish? it must be tricky if u do, with them being in water.
Originally posted by SteveI assume you have had to put down some animals, does it affect you? I've had a couple of pets over the years that have had to been put down. Now i have decided not to get anymore pets.
Originally posted by SteveDo u reckon you could have made it as a doctor/surgeon mentally, is it much the same as a vet?
Originally posted by djrlewis
That's a tricky one to answer. Honestly, most of the time, no. But that is largely because I know that I'm doing it for the right reasons and to ease the suffering of a much loved pet. Plus, I will rarely have the emotional bond with the pet that the owner would. If I've seen a pet a lot - for example for chemotherapy, then it does get harder. I'm not looking forward to the day my dogs and cats need it, that's for sure.
But as part of the job you have to be able to harden and distance yourself to these things, else it would be impossible. And for something you do nearly every day, that wouldn't be good.
Originally posted by WojBhoy[..]
It honestly never occurred to me that a) animals could contract cancer and b) have treatment for it...
Originally posted by germcevoy[..]
I'll admit to being have as naive. I knew animals could have cancer (had a dog that died of it) but I never knew about the chemo. It was never offered to us (the dog was 15 so it wouldnt have been worth the money anyways)
Originally posted by djrlewisTo be picky Harry, you can't contract cancer. It's not contagious or infectious.
Just fucking unlucky.
Dogs will get masses (called neoplasia) just like we can and they are either benign or malignant, again like us. Malignant lumps are capable of something called metastasis (spreading) and when that happens, it's cancer.
Sounds like both of you were very unfortunate with your pets and they had malignant lumps.
Chemo is available but is severely limited in comparison to humans. It's only really appropriate for a handful of situations and even then has limited efficacy (increasing life -expectancy by 1-2 years at best). And it does cost a fortune - £1000-1500 at least for a course.
Life sucks sometimes.
Fortunately, benign lumps that I can do something about are far more common.
Originally posted by djrlewisD
Dogs will get masses (called neoplasia)