Thursday 29 August 2013

New Dog & London


Pippa has been on Burns High Oats since Easter and I think she has lost a bit of weight. She palpates well now and I don't want her to lose any more. She looks bigger than she is due to all the hair and she has quite a big chest area too so that gives the illusion she is bigger than she is. I shall of course ask the opinion of the vet at a later date :).


Me- tentatively NOT touching the exhibit :)
I've also been to London overnight last weekend which was really nice with the boyfriend. We went to the British Museum where I really liked looking around the Egyptian artefact section. They also have the Rosetta stone here. I have always had an interest in ancient history and Egyptology would have been the degree I would have done as my degree if I went a non science related route earlier on in life. I just find it all really interesting. 

Tower Bridge :)
We also had dinner at a lovely restaurant at the Britannia International Hotel at the Canary Wharf. It was the nicest Indian ever and I had chicken tikka masala. We then ventured out at nighttime on a night bus tour at London. We saw a lot of the major landmarks so it was one of the best overall things for our overnight trip to London. The next day we visited the Royal Mews and were a bit disappointed we didn't get to see the changing of the guards. We then went to the Tower of London which I've been interested in visiting after watching the White Queen and the Princes in the Tower legend on the BBC recently. The crown jewels were every bit as impressive as you are lead to believe, but there was a distinct lack of jewellery or simpler tiaras which I was also expecting! We had over an hour wait to see these, and I think the Tower would be a day visit if you wanted to explore every part thoroughly! 

Me and the boyf with Tower Bridge in the Background :).
We also saw the Conjuring at the local cinema. It was very scary. It is based on a true story and I had to leave halfway through as I cannot deal very well with ghost stuff! Worth a visit as the storyline is gripping and will leave you with a chill! 



Saturday 17 August 2013

Grey's Anatomy


My new fad at the moment episode wise is Grey's Anatomy. It's pretty awesome as it combines romance with medicine! I'm doing my annoying habit of skipping episodes though :(. I'm currently towards the end of season 2, so I have another 7 seasons to go score! I'm watching episodes because I'm severely lacking in reading books at the moment. Going to dig out my library card as I'm in need of a dire trip to the library at the end of the road to get my fix over the next three weeks when I don't have as much to do now I've finished my first five weeks of small animal placement. 

Other things I am watching at the moment are the white queen, pretty little liars and switched at birth. Might have mentioned these before. I really like switched at birth as it adds a new dimension with it introducing a lot of deaf characters and their lives. I don't think the second season is quite as good as the first, but its still slightly addictive. Pretty Little Liars keeps me addicted because I want to know who 'A' is. I like the characters again and my favourite is hanna. I'm not too keen on Emily or Spencer at the moment! I think they should reveal a bit more about who A actually is. The White Queen is really good. I love history documentaries, and Edward in this is really dashing. I've always been interested in this history period especially about the princes who disappeared in the tower, and this series lets you understand the history in a really communicative way! I would recommend all of these but especially the white queen and greys :). 

I also read Fifty Shades of Grey recently. Its actually not really that outrageous.. and not very skilfully written... The background story is vaguely interesting at the beginning until the plot entirely disintegrates into sordid scenes..I wouldn't recommend it. At the moment I like reading the History Mills and Boon series. Yes, I quite like romance books :D. 




If you want to know about vet stuff.. you're reading a vet blog right? The things topical with me at the moment are which flea stuff to use with the lungworm increasing, the pet passport scheme and a few other things. 

For dental care I generally brush my dogs teeth everyday with an enzymatic based toothpaste and small ended toothbrush and add plaque off proden to her food. Not sure how good the proden is because the brushing is meant to be the single most effective thing you can do to safeguard oral health. You can also get things to add to the dogs water as a mouthwash which are clorhexidine based which are also meant to be effective (I don't use as I don't want to overload doggy with stuff) and interestingly this is the stuff used in humans corsodyl mouthwash against gum disease administered by your dentist! I also learned that smaller dogs are more prone to dental health problems (I knew this before), but with the teeth roots stabilising the jaws, a broken jaw is actually a moderate risk in routine dental procedure! Not something I was aware of, but something I will be very wary about in future!




The pet passport scheme is something I did an essay about last year, and whether the drastic measures of six months quarantine was actually necessary as there was a lot of speculation around it. Interestingly, the vet was filling in an export for a dog to go to Japan the other week, and we have to get blood tests now in this country alongside the 21 days wait which is generally imposed because a number of countries consider us to actually not be rabies free due to our laxer pet passport restrictions! I also saw an animal which had somehow got through customs without a rabies vaccine stamped in their passport at all as proof, the animal just merely had its tapeworm treatment.. figure that one out! The vet also had a lot of trouble trying to get through to any department to figure out what he had to do with the case. There didn't seem to be any sort of process in place to act against a dog with possible rabies threat being loose in the country! The response was at least 24+ hours. 

For flea and worm treatment at the moment I'm still using advocate which I really like. Its a bit pricier than normal wormers etc but it does everything but tapeworms and the main thing is it also protects against lungworm. The main ingredients are moxidectin and imidacloprid. In addition to this, the only other preventative against lungworm (angiostrongylus vasorum) is milbemax which contains milbemycin oxime (I believe). It has only just been licensed and needs to be given every month. 

Thursday 8 August 2013

The downsides to being a vet..student...


The image presented of being a vet is a fluffy one. They get to treat animals, earn lots of money and heal animals! How bad can that be? Earning top MONEY and loving the job you say? What really is masked is the downsides that also accompany this job vocation. 

Being on work experience has led me to appreciate the upsides and downsides of possibly being a first opinion small animal vet. I know I want to do small animals- its the one thing I've ALWAYS been interested in. Major upsides for me are the interesting cases, seeing how the animals get better with the treatment the vet gives, and being able to make an actual difference to the life of that animal and be an influence. Some owners are extremely dedicated to their pets, and a few of them have really made me smile over the past few weeks (although in the same breath some really make me despair at pet owners!). I think that I'd have to perhaps specialise in this environment though as I'm not sure I'd be satisfied with just doing first opinion work. 

The downsides to me so far have been a few things. Owners are limited by money, which is understandable, and this is one of the major dilemmas a vet faces. I can understand if an owner has to plump for the cheaper treatments rather than the more expensive radiographs etc but when an owner can't even afford the yearly vaccinations and consultation fees it makes me slightly angry as to why they have a pet when they really can't afford treatment for it, however, this is something that we can be faced with numerous times as an ethical dilemma in general practice. 

Other downsides for me have been the amount of routine appointments and the long hours the job demands. I knew what I signed up for certainly, but through the endless bitch spays and same old anaesthesia combinations- I think I'd want to be faced with something new, maybe more cutting edge everyday? Y'know, the consultations are where its at for me at the moment. The surgery is interesting but when you work out the medicine and management of a complicated case- I think my interest might be towards medicine and working things out rather than surgery. We already know I have an interest in neurology- I think! This works out perfectly for me as many cases are managed medically rather than surgically! 

The long hours are a major downside for me. I have too many dreams outside being a vet. Yes I love the job, the learning, and I don't want to just go home and forget about a case... but on the flip side I want a family (preferably before I'm 30), and time to do other things- horseriding maybe, but especially dog training and owning a dog. The work-life balance is something I'm struggling to accept at the moment, and with many days being easily 8-7/8 and that doesn't count overtime or out of hours, when am I going to have time to fit ANYTHING in. To be fair though, being a vet opens a lot of doors. Maybe the general practice and time it demands isn't for me? I guess we'll see about that one, or just maybe, I need to find something where I can be flexible and get what I want. 

Someone once told me- if there isn't your perfect job out there, you can always create it. I believe in this, and just maybe this is what I'm going to have to do :). Chow for now.