I couldn't help laughing when a friend, another vet, sent me this video. Everyone in veterinary practice has had this conversation... though often the 'client' is rather more aggressive and intimidating than this.
I couldn't help laughing when a friend, another vet, sent me this video. Everyone in veterinary practice has had this conversation... though often the 'client' is rather more aggressive and intimidating than this.
Posted on March 03, 2011 at 08:46 PM in finance, idiots, profession, rant, vet, welfare | Permalink | Comments (2)
Reblog
(0)
| |
Last week Mary Bale, a woman from Coventry, was convicted in a prosecution brought by the RSPCA of causing unnecessary suffering to a cat by putting it in a wheelie bin in which it was then trapped for 15 hours. She received a fine of £250 and was ordered to pay £1,171 in costs. She has also been banned from keeping animals for five years. Many of you will remember the uproar when the CCTV footage of the incident was first posted online a couple of months ago. For the background to the story, see the BBC story, and the RSPCA press release.
Bystander, a magistrate blogger, complains about the size of the costs award and the special status of the RSPCA as prosecuting authority. The odd status of the RSPCA is something that has bothered me for a while, and which I really do feel is a problem for the charity and for animal welfare and protection in general in this country.
The RSPCA is an independent charitable body which (as they never tire from telling us when fundraising) receives no government funding, and has no statutory legal authority, but which nevertheless finds itself cast in the role of investigating and prosecuting authority for much animal welfare law in this country.
As well as their work in prosecuting cruelty cases, the RSPCA provides rescue and rehoming services, free and cut-price veterinary services to pet owners on low incomes through a variety of channels, provides some rescue and rehabilitation for wildlife casualties, and campaigns on issues of animal welfare including farm animal welfare, welfare of performing animals, agitates against blood sports, and funds overseas animal welfare projects. They also lobby on, and participate in consultations regarding the writing of animal welfare law in England and Wales, (for instance campaigning against badger culling). You can read more detail in the RSPCA Mission Statement.
Essentially the RSPCA is suffering from a huge identity crisis. Is it the Police? The Crime Prosecution Service? Social Services? An NHS for pets? The League Against Cruel Sports? Amnesty International (animal division)?
RSPCA Inspectors have no statutory powers, but you would be easily forgiven for believing otherwise on occasion when watching them at work. The RSPCA were interviewed quite revealingly on the subject for a Sunday Times article from July 2007, discussing the widespread perception that RSPCA Inspectors have powers of entry and seizure. I can see why individual inspectors find this useful in getting their work done, and you certainly hear stories of them overstepping the mark in throwing their weight around. The adoption of police ranks and police-alike uniforms certainly help this public perception. Be in no doubt, then - RSPCA Inspectors have no power of entry to properties - unlike the TV licensing man, or the chap from the water board - and no power to seize your property (and animals in your possession *are* your property). Power of seizure is restricted to police, officers of the local authority and Animal Health officials (Hansard - Lords Questions - Feb 23, 2010). Prosecutions for animal cruelty brought by the RSPCA are private prosecutions, using the same legal powers that any citizen could wield, if they were minded to.
How, then, has the RSPCA ended up with this perception of pseudo-statutory powers and essentially established itself as the ultimate arbiter of animal welfare in England and Wales? I can only guess, but it seems partly that they've self-appointed themselves thus, and partly that the correct authorities are content to allow them to continue to do so out of laziness and a sense of lack of relevant knowledge and experience on their own parts. Incidentally - Trading Standards (the people at the local council who worry about whether the pound of spuds you bought at the market really *was* a pound, or who take on dodgy cowboy builders) are the enforcement authority for farm animal welfare.
In my day to day practicing life I come across the RSPCA in two main circumstances - the first being when inspectors ask my advice or bring animals to me for assessment and treatment. In general I have found individual RSPCA Inspectors I have met to be caring, competent and professional - however their priorities can be distorted, one assumes by central priorities. One particular Inspector, shortly after the partial docking ban was passed, was memorably much more interested in whether a sick puppy we were concerned about had a docked tail than about its perilous immediate state of health.
My other main interaction with them is when trying to arrange treatment and care for stray and injured animals brought in by members of the public. These animals generally come to the surgery after a concerned member of the public has phoned the RSPCA and been told to bring them to us. The process of caring for such patients is governed by a Memorandum of Understanding drawn up between the RSPCA and the BVA which sets out what treatment the RSPCA will fund, and how. This should make the process of organising emergency treatment nice and straightforward, however it's rarely that simple. It can take a number of hours of telephone tag and sitting on hold for our nurses or receptionists to get the critical 'Log Number' to allow us to start treatment, and getting the RSPCA to then take these stray animals into shelters once their medical needs have been met is, at least at the moment, nearly impossible. We are left, as a private practice, to try to find homes for these animals, or find local welfare and rescue organisations willing to take them on. In the meantime the poor animal is in one of our hospital cages - not appropriate long-term accommodation - and at potential risk from other sick animals in the practice. It is hard to find a single practicing Veterinary Surgeon who finds dealing with the RSPCA anything other than a profoundly difficult and frustrating experience - and many, believe me, have far less polite things to say than that…
So my question is this - today, in 2010, 186 years after it was first founded, what is the RSPCA for? What do people think they are funding when they put their pound or two in the collecting box, and how does that stack up against reality? I strongly believe that most people who are involved with the RSPCA, as employees, volunteers, campaigners and fundraisers, are genuinely guided by good intentions and are working very hard to do the best job they can. But which job? So little of their time and effort seems directed to what most people would probably regard as the 'core' role - providing emergency treatment and shelter for animals in need - and so much on political campaigning and their pseudo-statutory role in law enforcement.
It seems to me that we desperately need some clarity. My pipe dream? For investigations into animal welfare and abuse to be carried out and prosecuted by specialist teams working and funded within the normal police and criminal prosecution channels (though in the current public financial straights it seems sadly unlikely that the police would willingly take on extra work) and for the RSPCA to distinguish carefully between their rescue and rehabilitation and rehoming work, and their political campaigns.
And while that remains pie in the sky? I would just ask you to think carefully about the large amounts of money donated to animal charities in the UK every year. Decide where you actually want your hard-earned money going. Rescue and rehoming? There are wonderful, dedicated, local animal shelters and wildlife rehabilitation services up and down the country to whom you could donate - after all, that's where many stray and unwanted animals referred to the RSPCA are likely to end up anyway - or national organisations like the Cats Protection, Dogs Trust, and Redwings Horse Sanctuary. Charity veterinary treatment? Think about the Blue Cross. Political campaigning on animal welfare issues? You have a world of choice, from the sensible to the militant. And if you're interested in improving the health and veterinary care for animals all over the world, by increasing our clinical knowledge of conditions and treatments, please consider donating to Petsavers. Finally remember, most charities would much rather you donated your time and expertise than your money, so in these cash-strapped times do please consider volunteering!
Posted on October 22, 2010 at 02:34 PM in cats, Current Affairs, dogs, legal, RSPCA, veterinary, welfare | Permalink | Comments (8)
Reblog
(0)
| |
Quick Facts:
Perhaps fortunately, the sort of milk chocolate popular in the UK is very low in cocoa solids, so cases of serious poisoning from Dairy Milk and Mars bars are uncommon in all but the smallest dogs. Don't however underestimate the cocoa content of cakes and deserts prepared with cocoa powder. If in doubt, it's always better to seek advice early than to wait and see.
Chocolate poisoning is an unfortunate feature of the holiday seasons in veterinary practice - we see it most commonly around Christmas and Easter, though of course it can occur at any time of year. Please be careful when leaving chocolates around the house - particular in larger than usual seasonal quantities - and avoid the use of chocolate Christmas tree decorations (which are usually pretty disappointing in any case!). Please also beware the alcohol content of liqueur chocolates. Sadly, poisoning of pets by intentional 'treating' with chocolate does still occur, so continuing education of both the pet owning and general public is clearly required.
Posted on September 30, 2010 at 10:58 AM in alcohol, chocolate, dogs, poisons, poisons a to z, toxicology, veterinary | Permalink | Comments (1)
Reblog
(0)
| |
Vet in Harness has moved to this new home at TypePad due to the sad demise of the blogging service at Vox. I hope many of you are able to join us here. For those of you using RSS readers, the feed is now available at feed://vetinharness.typepad.com/blog/rss.xml. I hope to have more time to be blogging actively again in the near future, so keep your eyes peeled for updates soon!
Posted on September 28, 2010 at 05:11 PM in blog, public service announcement | Permalink | Comments (1)
Reblog
(0)
| |
Those of you in the UK can't have failed to notice that it was Guy Faukes' Night recently, when we celebrate the fact
that a seventeenth century Catholic terrorist failed to blow up Parliament with several kegs of gunpowder, by burning him in effigy, setting fire to great piles of garden waste and permitting private individuals to play with explosives.
Posted on November 15, 2008 at 08:57 AM in alternative therapies, anxiety, cats, dogs, fireworks, noise, pharmaceuticals, phobia, veterinary | Permalink | Comments (1)
Reblog
(0)
| |
Yesterday, the Kennel Club announced its plan 'to clamp down on breeders to safeguard health of pedigree pets'. The choice of language is their own, is surprisingly strong, and on its own is interesting. These breeders, after all, on whom they want to 'clamp down', are the core of their business, the Kennel Club's absolute life-blood, and people who historically they have been extremely sensitive with and unwilling to upset, claiming that any attempt to introduce regulation without consent would simply drive these breeders away and make things worse rather than better.
Posted on October 08, 2008 at 12:58 PM in dog breeds, dogs, genetics, health issues, kennel club, media, pedigree, press release, television, veterinary | Permalink | Comments (1)
Reblog
(0)
| |
Quick facts:
Next Time - C is for Chocolate -- A to Z of Pet Poisons - Index
Posted on September 07, 2008 at 07:53 PM in barbiturates, pharmaceuticals, phenobarbital, poisons, poisons a to z, toxicology, veterinary | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| |
Since it aired on Tuesday evening, almost every client to come into my consulting room has been asking me what I thought of BBC1's 'Pedigree Dogs Exposed' (BBC press release, BBC iPlayer video of episode - only valid for 7 days from initial broadcast). It was a very well put together exposé of the darker side of dog breeding, dog showing, and the health down-side that can occur when dogs are bred thoughtlessly, callously, and with their health and well-being somewhere down the priorities list after the breeder's showing success and financial considerations. It's fair to say that there was shouting at the telly going on in my living room on Tuesday evening. It was a good piece of investigative, issue-driven, campaigning broadcasting - I'm sure the breeders and the Kennel Club won't think it even-handed, but the science and reporting was on the whole sound, and well understood and explained. And the things it covered were not much of a surprise if you're in the veterinary world.
Posted on August 23, 2008 at 08:29 PM in bbc, breeding, dog breeders, dog breeds, dogs, genetics, health issues, kennel club, media, pedigree, television, veterinary | Permalink | Comments (8)
Reblog
(0)
| |
Quick facts:
Alcohol poisoning is commonly the effect of accidental ingestion of alcoholic drinks by pets. Dogs are generally more prone to eating and drinking things they shouldn't than cats are. Sadly, we also see cases of people intentionally feeding animals alcoholic beverages. While small amounts of alcohol are unlikely to be dangerous, please never give dogs or cats even small amounts of alcohol. No, Auntie Mabel's Chihuahua does *not* want or need a tot of brandy at Christmas! And despite the fact a lot of dogs seem to like the taste of beer, please don't buy them a pint when you get your round in at the pub!
The relative difference in body weight between pets and humans, and differences in metabolism of alcohol, can make even small doses potentially hazardous. Also consider that the experience of being 'drunk', though some humans might find it pleasant and it may be entertaining to watch, must be very frightening for a pet who doesn't know what is going on!
Don't forget the risks of dogs or cats ingesting significant quantities of alcohol in liqueur chocolates (we'll get on to the hazards of chocolate - and theobromine, which it contains - further down the alphabet), booze-soaked Christmas cake or Christmas pudding (which also contain raisins and currants which are toxic in their own right) or 'cleaning up' human vomit at boozy teenagers' parties!
Next time - B is for Barbiturates. -- A to Z of Pet Poisons - Index
Posted on August 21, 2008 at 05:22 PM in alcohol, poisons, poisons a to z, toxicology, veterinary | Permalink | Comments (2)
Reblog
(0)
| |
Those of you in the UK can't have failed to notice that we've had Foot and Mouth Disease back in the last month. I was alerted to this fact while trying to enjoy a BBQ at a friend's on a Friday evening on call by the arrival of a text message from a colleague. It's one of those bits of news you just don't want to hear, even now that I'm not a mixed practice vet any more.
Anyway, it's a testament to the speed and thoroughness of the response, this time, that things seem to be under control, and we got (yet another, very keen they've been) fax today from Animal Health letting us know that movement restrictions are now being essentially removed and that we can soon export meat to the EU again. So, good work all around.
The outbreak seems to have been halted with only two premises finally confirmed infected with FMDV strain 01/BFS67, a strain of foot and mouth disease which was responsible for the 1967 UK outbreak but which has not been seen circulating in livestock or wildlife anywhere in the world for several years, living out a peaceful retirement as a reference strain in bottles in a number of research laboratories, and with a sideline in vaccine production.
Except.
[And the rest of this piece is pure speculation, and comes with a *humungous* caveat, which is that I have no real idea what the procedure for confirming FMDV is, other than that samples are taken on suspicion and a day or two later a press release comes out from DEFRA saying 'confirmed' or not. The difficulty with FMDV is that several other disease of cattle, sheep and pigs, such as Mucosal Disease, and Vesicular Stomatitis, mimic the clinical signs of FMDV very closely, so that suspect cases actually come up more often than people would expect. If the procedure is a good robust one with multiple samples sent to multiple labs for cross-checking, then the following isn't really at all likely. But I just have a slight worry that what happens is that the samples taken are sent off to one VI (veterinary investigation) lab somewhere, possibly even Pirbright, where one technician or scientist, or small group of technicians, whose job it is to process suspect FMDV samples, get on and do their jobs. In which case...]
There are two possibilities here, and I think the second deserves at least a passing glance. The first and apparently accepted story is that, somehow, despite the biosecurity precautions at the Pirbright Institute for Animal Health, and at the vaccine plant operated by Merial on the same premises, some of virus strain 01/BFS67 was allowed to escape, and somehow came into contact with cattle and caused the outbreak.
But isn't it just possible that, if suspect samples are tested in one place, by one group, perhaps even with the same batches of reagents, that the two 'confirmed' results are in fact the result of contamination of the samples with a reference strain inside the laboratory? Just a *little* possible? After all, modern analytic processes like PCR can be exquisitely, painfully sensitive. And contamination in labs with reference material has certainly been known to produce false positives in the past.
Anyway, I'm sure the clever people who are paid to think about these things have considered this, and ruled it out. But it occurred to me in an idle moment and brought me up short, so I thought I'd share it with you all. Not so much a conspiracy theory as an incompetence theory, I suppose. And as my Gran would have reminded me, you should never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by carelessness or stupidity.
Posted on August 23, 2007 at 04:58 PM in foot and mouth disease, veterinary, virology | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| |
| Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||
| 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 |
| 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |
| 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 |
Recent Comments