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The Daily Vet is a blog featuring veterinarians from all walks of life. Every week they will tackle entertaining, interesting, and sometimes difficult topics in the world of animal medicine – all in the hopes that their unique insights and personal experiences will help you to understand your pets.

 

The Benefits and Shortcomings of Veterinary House Calls

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October 02, 2012 / (2) comments

As a veterinarian with a primarily house call based practice, I see both the benefits and the shortcomings, for both my clients and patients, associated with home pet care.

 

Merits to the Patient

 

Almost daily, I travel from house to house providing acupuncture treatments to my patients. Through experience, I’ve discovered that a more ideal outcome from acupuncture occurs in the controlled quarters of familiar household. My biggest challenge is finding the most appropriate space; one that is isolated, comfortable, and free from stimuli that are counterproductive to the acupuncture process (telephones, doorbells, talkative clients, unruly children).

When a veterinarian comes to the house, the pet benefits from not having to leave the safe confines of its own home. The process of being transported to the veterinary hospital is often quite stressful and potentially dangerous for both cats and dogs.

Geriatric, juvenile, mobility compromised, and sick pets are prone to trauma from being shaken around in the car during transportation. On many occasions, I have seen pets suffer injuries as a result of their owners’ lack of enforcement of pet restraint while driving. This primarily occurs when a pet is not appropriately confined and takes a tumble from its standing or seating position following an abrupt stop. Therefore, I suggest all pets be properly restrained in a carrier or seat-belted harness at all times.

Cats must be confined to a sturdy plastic or cardboard carrier, which is typically an unfamiliar situation. Small dogs may also be carrier transported, held by the owner, or actually walk on their own on their own four feet, like your typical medium to large canine companion. Travel and confinement stress can lead to unusual canine and feline behaviors, including panting, vocalizing, restlessness, and inappropriate urination or defecation.

Upon arriving at the veterinary hospital, transitioning from the car to the facility also poses challenges. Large, mobility-challenged dogs may need the help of a technician or stretcher. The new smells and sights experienced after leaving the car are highly stimulating for any pooch. Dogs not well adjusted to leash walking typically will lunge in all directions and compress their neck structures (trachea, esophagus, vertebrae, etc.) if they are pulling on a cervical (neck) collar.

Once inside the hospital, pets can potentially pick up infectious organisms (bacteria, viruses, parasite, etc.). Exposure could come from direct contact with other animals or surfaces that have been contaminated with a microorganism (including the hands and clothing of hospital staff members). After all, hospitals are places of sickness, which puts our pets’ health at risk upon entering.

 

Benefits to the Client

 

House calls benefit clients by permitting their pet’s medical evaluation to be done on their own terms. My clients are busy juggling family and career, so the time management advantages of having a familiar face come to their home supersedes any desire to travel through Los Angeles’s traffic laden streets and potentially endure the seemingly inevitable delays that occur in hospital settings.

Additionally, home visitation provides the client more of an opportunity to completely share their perspective on their pet’s current state of health or illness. House call consultations tend to take more time and can be more thorough than in the facility versions. The ability for the veterinarian to closely observe the home environment shared by people and animals lends additional perspective on what may be contributing to a pet’s illness.

One of the most valuable services we house call veterinarians provide is euthanasia. My clients much prefer to have their pets exit this world in the in the comfortable, familiar, and calm environment of their own home instead of the more public and sometimes harried hospital environment.

 

Shortcomings for the Pet and Client

 

House call visits often do not permit certain diagnostics to be performed, including radiographs (X-rays), CT scans, MRI, and ultrasound (although portable ultrasound units exist). Additionally, surgical procedures are best done in the more controlled environment of hospital facility (although some veterinarians have surgery-enabled trucks).

Most specialty veterinary care needs to occur within a hospital and is not routinely offered on a house call basis. Nearly all emergency situations, such as severe trauma (lacerations, bite wounds, hit-by-car, etc.), toxicities, allergic reactions, and heat related illnesses also merit hospital-based treatment.

House call veterinary care can be more expensive than in-facility care. This depends on the services being provided, travel, time of day, regional socioeconomics, and other intangible factors.

 

*

 

If you are looking for a house call veterinarian, ask for a personal referral from your friends, family, neighbors, or from the veterinarians that have previously treated your pet.

 

dog acupuncture, dr mahaney, patrick mahaney, veterinary house call

House call based veterinary acupuncture

 

dog acupuncture, home veterinary care, veterinary house call, dr mahaney, patrick mahaney

Acupuncture patient being treated at home]

 

patrick mahaney, dr mahaney, veterinary house call, home veterinary care

Getting some appreciation from a patient

 

 

Dr. Patrick Mahaney

 

 

Image: Getting some appreciation from a patient, by Dr. Patrick Mahaney

 

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COMMENTS (2)
1
House Calls for Cats
by TheOldBroad on 10/02/2012 07:38am

In my experience, since going to a clinic truly IS a frightening experience for kitties, sometimes the Cat from the Underworld is easier to handle in a clinic setting for a checkup.

In the home, other than having a stranger there, Fluffy usually feels free to act up. In a clinic, Fluffy is usually easier to handle.

Do you ask your feline owning clients to put Fluffy in a secure area prior to your arrival so you're not crawling under beds or the client isn't frantically searching closets?

by Dr. Patrick Mahaney on 10/03/2012 02:45am

Thank you for sharing your perspective on how a cat may potentially behave when a stranger (veterinarian, that is) comes to the home to provide a medical evaluation.
The majority of feline patients that ICR more comfortable in their home setting as compared to a veterinary hospital.

Through trial and error, I have learned that (YES) it is important to suggest to a client that they keep the feline patient in a confined space so that the planned appointment can occur as scheduled. On one occasion, I had a new, indoor/outdoor feline patient escape from the home shortly before my planed examination time. I had traveled approximately 45 minutes from West Hollywood to the canyons north of Malibu, CA and we then had to schedule the examination for another time.

Thank you for your comments,
Dr PM

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