Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why some people think these spay and neuter clinics are more qualified than their vets. I feel like our pets got more personalized attention and care from our trusted vet who wasn’t just powering through a list of spays for the day.
They are. In surgery, motor hand and eye coordination counts for a lot in the outcome. If you do exactly the same procedure all the time, your skill level for that procedure will be absolutely unmatched. It works for human surgeries as well. You actually DO want someone who does the same surgeries all the damn time. Bedside manner for surgery is not important at all - you're out like a light anyway, or your dog is. No surgeons and team are going to be cruel to your animal - that's not why they're in this business, PP! They're going to give your dog/cat the best care, because the best care means a clean and precise act done in the shortest amount of time to minimize anesthesia risks, all because they know exactly what to do.
You need to understand what's important here. "Personalized attention and care" doesn't mean what you think it means when it comes to surgery.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why some people think these spay and neuter clinics are more qualified than their vets. I feel like our pets got more personalized attention and care from our trusted vet who wasn’t just powering through a list of spays for the day.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why some people think these spay and neuter clinics are more qualified than their vets. I feel like our pets got more personalized attention and care from our trusted vet who wasn’t just powering through a list of spays for the day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The advice we received was to take our dog to a clinic that just does spay/neuters for the safest results, but I literally can’t find one that has an opening. They’re all booked for months out and/or restricted to low income families. Is this normal? Not in DMV fwiw
Long wait is normal for low cost spay/neuter clinics. Just get in line and wait, it's not an emergency procedure.
We don’t need low cost, just a place that does them day in and day out
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The advice we received was to take our dog to a clinic that just does spay/neuters for the safest results, but I literally can’t find one that has an opening. They’re all booked for months out and/or restricted to low income families. Is this normal? Not in DMV fwiw
Long wait is normal for low cost spay/neuter clinics. Just get in line and wait, it's not an emergency procedure.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of cases does mean they know how to do the surgery but ime you can get safe surgery and convenient aftercare {eg animal rips a stitch, gets infection) with a local vet at high cost.
If money isn't the consideration do you have a trusted vet? If not you will need one. If you don't trust the one you have then hmmm.
Anonymous wrote:The advice we received was to take our dog to a clinic that just does spay/neuters for the safest results, but I literally can’t find one that has an opening. They’re all booked for months out and/or restricted to low income families. Is this normal? Not in DMV fwiw