How many veterinarians
work at a hospital that give them the latitude to express their own voice?
A place where they can
stand up and say "NO!," when they don't feel right about what they are
being asked to do?
I often wonder this?
The biggest reason that
I decided I needed to own my own clinic after I graduated veterinary school was
that I knew I would have some hard cases that required a decision to be made
between the business and the patient. I did not enter veterinary medicine to
get rich. Not that some can't but there are compromises every wealthy person
makes. Some spend less time with their family in an effort to make a
living, or sacrifice personal time to develop stronger business practices, and
some sacrifice the reason they went into veterinary school. History and revenue sheets
all indicate that to be successful in the veterinary business world you must
treat the business like a business. You charge for what you do, you do what the
customer asks, and you don't get emotionally or personally involved. Almost all
successful big veterinary practices have established protocols, business plans,
and spread sheets to maximize their revenues. It is exceptionally difficult to
run a person to person to patient business based on a spread sheet. The
intimacy gets lost in the numbers. There is lost revenue in time spent with
clients talking, and there are muddy treacherous waters in having your own
opinion and your own barriers. Then, should you still decide to side with the
pet and stand in opposition to the owner there is the whole big messy ball of wax about
what the hell to do with a pet that the owners no longer want? This is the
place where associates get crucified. This is the place that your heart gets
broken, your soul gets sacrificed, and the burn out and fatigue gnaw on you
until you either break or become indifferent.
I have had to learn that
my ability to care for other peoples pets is a tenuous complicated road of
where my beliefs stand and, often, the great divide, of others. I have to remind myself
every single day that I am the vet who worked a lifetime to be a healer and not anything
else.
It is never an easy
answer; the reasons that people make the decisions that they do about their
pets, especially when it relates to end of life decisions.
Veterinarians are asked
every day to be the person who will;
- end a life due to financial constraints
- end a life due to necessity
- end a life due to lack of perceived value
- end a life due to many reasons that are beyond my
ability to justify..like moving, death, unmanageable medical needs,
lifestyle changes, and such.
Last night was a repeat
of a situation I find myself in every so often. Hard as I try to avoid it, it
still happens.
I have told the staff
repeatedly that we do not take appointment requests for new clients seeking to
euthanize their pet. All requests should be booked as an 'examination'. IF the
veterinarian examines the patient AND agrees that the condition warrants
euthanasia the pet will be humanely euthanized. IF NOT, the client has been
notified that the request must be consensual and cannot be expected. There are
those who disagree with this position. I remind those veterinarians that there
is a divide between the law and the beliefs of our desired clientele. Not one
single small animal vet desires to work for clients who regards their pet as
simply 'property'. If we did our average client transaction would never pay our
mortgages. Don't ask for one, "patients = property and therefore protect
against liability", and hope for the other, "client spends thousands
to treat life threatening disease." We market our goods and services,
encourage diagnostics, allow walk-ins, emergencies, provide surgical treatments
always in excess of "replacement value" and then euthanize at whim.
It is a contradictory incongruous hypocritical business model.
And so I arrived at the
exam room paperwork in hand for tonight's euthanasia. The clients had never
been to see us before, I did not know this case, and I had no history to
accompany the file. And there stood before me a happy, bright, inquisitive,
young dog. If he was sick someone had forgotten to tell him. He had an obvious
limp but he was happy to be here and anxiously awaiting a "Hello"
from me. The night froze and I knew the story was about to get sticky.
I am not sure how many
vets would have stopped their incredibly busy night to talk to this couple? but I
spent the next 30 minutes talking and trying to understand to their story, their
concerns, and what my role in helping this pet was? In the end I
stood between a husband who was unwilling to spend any more money on a case that he believed was not treatable, a wife who loved her dog desperately, and a dog who
was happy, maybe not perfect, maybe not going to live another half decade, but
today, at this moment happy and functional.
In this appointment
debacle the husband and wife were at odds about what to do. The husband wanted
to let the pet go. The wife stood quietly sobbing. The dog was running around
the room wagging, jumping, playing, and soo happy to be round new people. And
there I was thinking that I should have gone to floral design school. How do I
pick a side on this one? It was a perfect example of the worst cases to be a
part of. Where the hell do I go? What do I do? Who loses here?
I had to walk away and get
out of the room for 15 minutes to think about what I was about to do.
I found my associate and
asked her. Her words of encouragement and advice put the wind back in my sails.
"Screw them! Say NO! and get rid of them!" Now, I didn't go back and
use this language, but damn it felt good to hear it! I needed her support and I
knew then that my guts decision to refuse was the right one.
This is the point where
judgments are made. This was the point where I knew I was about to enter a
landmine of emotions and risk my neck for a dog I didn't know. This is where
the sick feeling in my soul reminds me that I better have a backup plan because
the Board of Veterinary Medicine was going to get another letter with my name
on it. This is where I had to decide if I could really stand behind my words,
my thoughts, my beliefs, and my desire to elevate veterinary medicine to the
place my clients believe it exists.
I refused to euthanize
that dog. I offered every single option imaginable. If I am going to duck out
of what my client wants I better be able to offer assistance to that pet and
the only way that pet is going to get assistance is with some options. It is
the luxury of my position, my lack of debt, and my compromise to sleeping at
night with a clear conscious. When the husband told me that he preferred the
dog dead versus in someone else's home I knew this was an examination and
euthanasia to absolve myself of. How could dead be better than elsewhere?
As the appointment ended
I made one last desperate move. I secretly handed the wife my cell phone
number.
For those of us who live
a life as a female I know that husbands often dictate the financial decisions.
I know that there are millenia of women told to keep quiet while the husband
decides where resources can be spent. I hear it every day. The women love and
adore a pet that the husband does not. I know this sounds terribly sexist,
generally broad sweeping and that there are some men who love their pets as
much as any woman does. But in 10 years of practice here is what I have seen: In general men make financial decisions over emotional decisions (perhaps the reason of my
clinics financial back seat?). Whereas women live by a more maternal guidance. We are
programmed to nurture and men are more pragmatic. An expense is calculated and
assigned a priority. Your pet doesn't drive you to work, pay the rent, or keep
food on the table. BUT a pet is the center of many a woman's heart. I would
give up a car, a trip, an expensive meal for the companionship and
unconditional love of my pet. I cannot take every pet, and I cannot work pro
bono consistently, but every time I have offered to help I knew it was the
right decision for me. I would regret making a different choice.
I often torture myself
over the afterward.. What will happen? Where will that pet end up? To try to
alleviate this I offer those clients lots of options. I keep talking even after
I refuse to help them with their request.
- "You can take your pet elsewhere if you are still
electing to euthanize." I understand there will likely be a backlash
from other vets about this.
- "You can find or look for financial assistance
through private companies. Like a credit card, bank, etc."
- "I can ask for help from my network of rescues,
friends, etc."
- "We find some way to compromise to get your pet
care." I think and behave outside of the box. I find a way to build a
bridge between caring for their pet and avoiding shouldering the entire
responsibility of a pet. In some cases the clinic will take responsibility
for the care of a pet and then assist in finding that pet a new home.
These cases remind my staff that there is a heart here. Our primary
mission is to help pets AND people. We do not sacrifice one for the other.
Clearly, I understand
that people have different feelings about their pets. Clearly, there are very
few veterinarians in the world who do not understand that pets have moved into
peoples homes and hearts and that this is very unlikely to change. But, there
is still a great divide on who a veterinarian is at the seat of their soul and
the tasks that they are asked to participate in.
I know that there are
many veterinarians out there who are told to do as the client asks. If the
client pays the veterinarian participates. If the client cannot pay the patient
is left to...??
There is no doubt that
compassion fatigue exists, that there is an over represented number of suicides
in our profession, but there is a reason for these. A deep cumulative reason. A
small incessant chipping away of the soul of the people we wanted to be,
thought we were, and make excuses as to why we have become who we are.
Our clients know who we
are. They know where we stand, where our obligation lies and they support us.
The days of clients asking and expecting services that are inconsistent with
our mission are few. The clients that remain are our foundation, our support,
and our cheering squad.
If, at this point in
time veterinarians do not embrace that segment of society who loves and treats
their pets as children we will lose our ability to be the provide both
exemplary care and care with purpose.
Update;
Two days later the wife
called me. We scheduled a treatment plan for her dog. I will help her with
costs, use some of our donation fund for him, and hope that we can find him a
palliative care. Shoot, I am hoping for a miracle, and who knows? Sometimes
there is salvation in trying.
A week later Charlie had surgery.. The end to his story can be found here.
A week later Charlie had surgery.. The end to his story can be found here.
Related blogs;
If you have a pet question you can find me on Pawbly.com. Pawbly is free for everyone and created to help people find answers to their pet concerns. We are a platform full of dedicated caring people.
You can also find me Twitter @FreePetAdvice. Or at the clinic, Jarrettsville Vet, where I get to hug, kiss, and enjoy the 99% of the wonderful things that being a veterinarian brings.