Anonymous wrote:Vet of 17 years here. Emergency clinics would be less slammed if people could keep their puppies out of their medicine and inappropriate foods. Also pick your socks and underwear off the floor and get a heavy trash can with a lid. Don't leave sanitary products in the bathroom trashcan. Foreign body surgeries take a long time.
Basically, lots of stuff seen in the ER is preventable. Spread the word.
There isn't a shortage of vets per se there is an extremely high demand for services. It goes beyond just the Covid puppies. (Loads of them are getting returned to the shelters now anyway.) People are just very keen right now on treating their pets. I guess they were just ignoring things before and hoping for the best IDK.
As far as if they will be able to staff up soon-- not sure if that's going to happen. The word is getting out of how stressful the profession is. And the demanding, entitled, unappreciative clients are getting more common and vocal. And the pay isn't going up proportionately while vet school tuition is. (Yes yes I know if I really loved animals I would do it for free blah blah blah)
OP here and I hear you about the socks etc. The little buggers are fast and my kids are forgetful! I hope our minor freakout (he’s ok fortunately!!) gets our kids taking it more seriously now, and it’s a wake up call to me that he isn’t ready for freedom without limits and our house doesn’t have enough limits in place. I already ordered a baby gate for the stairs leading to our basement where all the kids’ crap is…lol. Our issue last night was almost entirely mom and dad’s fault, though. The day before our two week vacation (pup accommodated us!) my husband noticed ants in the kids’ bathroom in the basement. Put an ant bait down to avoid returning to an infestation since we didn’t have time for pest control to come out, instantly forgot about it. It was the kind where the bait is contained inside but it was possible he got a little out. The bathrooms are supposed to be closed but our kids (and dad) have trouble remembering since it’s been a few years since we had a dog and we just aren’t accustomed to it yet (6 mo puppy!). He also has been either crated or tethered to one of us until recently and at 6 months is pushing his boundaries like adolescents do.
A friend of mine is a vet and she has quite some stories. Vet care is expensive, sure, but it’s not unexpected at all! Can’t afford it, don’t get a pet! I suspect the rude customers are just more of the entitled, disrespectful behavior trends you see elsewhere like in airports, restaurants, etc.

Our favorite vet has definitely had trouble keeping their vets on staff even before the pandemic. I think some have moved to lower COL areas or to practices with fewer hours. I appreciate your perspective as a reminder to everyone to treat everyone with respect, though (and that many pet emergencies are preventable!!).