julieDVM said:
What if this patient was anemic, or lacked clotting factors, and you failed to do the proper pre-Sx blood work, and it bled out on the table and died. Then where would you be? Would that have maximally benefited the patient? Dogs have a lot of intestines, who knows where the blockage could have been? If you ask me, you got lucky on this case.
At this point for that animal, the owners had already turned down doing diagnostics at least one other practice. The dog had been very ill for over a week and they had no intentions of opting for diagnostics. If what was done in this case was wrong, then what would you do? The only other options I see are: (1) allowing the dog to continue to be ill and hope that it improves on its own and (2) euthanizing the dog.
Personally, I think it would have been unethical at that point to just "wait and see." The majority of the potential problems it could have had would have resulted in eventual and painful death. I think it is far better to do something which could help, than do nothing which you know won't help. The clients were well informed about the risks of the surgery and the value of the diagnostics and they choose the surgery option. They did not want to euthanize. It seems you would not have even considered surgery an option, which again leads me to wonder, what would you do then?
julieDVM said:
I do not approve of this approach, nor do i approve of the idea that you can substitute guess work and cutting diagnostic corners for the sake of saving a buck. Most clients will pay for diagnostics if you explain the risks of not doing pre-op blood work etc.
I am not sure of what your experiences are, but if you are at referral type hospital then your clients essentially have already been screened according to what they are or are not willing to pay for. In my experience, it is very common for clients to be unwilling to pay for diagnostics. Those clients have already made the descision to pay for advanced services are seen at referral clincs. The clients that didn't had their animal either already treated using less expensive services or euthanized at the would-be referring hospital.
No one takes their horse to a university or referral clinic for colic treatment, gets there, and then says "boy this is expensive, just euthanize him." The descision to have (or not have) the surgery was already made at the farm.
Additionally, in this case...after the dog had been ill for so long, it is likely that its blood work would have been abnormal in at least some aspect. Again, do you just say "well he's not a good candiate for Sx, take him home to die."
This client, and many like them, continue to bounce from practice to practice untill the animal dies or they find a vet who offers a treatment course they agree with paying for. I do not think it is right to condemn this clinic for performing a treatment which could have potentially resolved the problem rather than doing nothing, and allowing the animal to suffer or become the problem of another vet.
julieDVM said:
I assure you, you wont be taught to treat patients this way in school.
Maybe not, but I think one needs to be competent and savy enough to tailor treatment when finances exclude the ideal treatment course. Part of the point of vet school is to educate you on all of the tools available to you, so that you can make descisions about what is appropriate.
I remember while touring a vet school, the person giving the tour was boasting about how they had fully switched to digital xrays. I asked if students ever gets exposure to reading the standard radiographs, because many clinics have not yet been able to incorporate digital. I foresaw a problem in being trained on very good quality images and then having issues making diagnoses on lesser quality images, once one entered a practice. You obviously can't tell the client "I can't do xrays b/c we do not have digital, and anything I tell you won't be completely informed." Part of the whole reason why many practices have not switched is b/c clients are not interested enough in the value of the digital images to pay more for them. The same can be said about many laser surgeries.
If you operate in a perfect world where client funds are limitless, then you may never need to make these descisions. The majority of individuals working in private practice, however, will need to have the smarts to make tough and educated descisions about talioring paitent care.