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Could he have gotten bit by something. Being a sunday is hard to get a vet, unless there is an emergency vet clinic around. Does he seem like he is in discomfort.
Check the phone book for an evening vet clinic. How old is your corgi?
Is he acting normal? Is he drinking and eating? Is this when he's laying or standing or both? Could he have gotten bitten by a bug or stung by a bee?
I would continue to call the vet...do they have an after hours's #? We have to leave a message and then the vet on call calls us back.
Hi Ameena, monitor his temperature, gum colour and breathing, Jogi could have come in contact with questionable plants / bug / spider bite, use your fingers to do a run down, look for bumps, put on a headlamp and check his skin for abnormality. If things turn for the worst, you'll need to take him to the emergency vet, if your vet have previous said that Jogi is not allergic to diphenhydramine, you can give him clear colour or white tab benedryl, if Jogi is under 30lbs, you can give him 10mg every 8 hours. If he is over 30lbs, give him 25mg every 8 hours. Good luck!
Does he seem painful? Is he eating? If he is painful and/or not eating he needs to be seen ASAP. Please keep us posted!
Hi Ameena, if I was in your situation, here's what I would do.
1. No one else except the vet should give you medical advise, get the name of the "nurse", document the whole thing and file a formal complaint to CA VMB. Make sure she never practice again in the state of California. You are doing this for Jogi and other California dogs.
2. File a formal complaint to central california BBB, once its in the system, it'll force the business to give you a formal response / make things right.
3. Take Jogi to your regular vet and ask WHO they recommend for ER in your area, shop for a back up vet just in case.
All the best and a speedy recovery to Jogi!
Thanks Sam...I'm so glad you were able to give advice and also hopefully stop things like this from going on. No one should have to experience this.
I agree with Sam, its against the law for a nurse to give medical advice, diagnose, or prognose. If a nurse is telling you your puppy is going to die, that is giving a prognosis and she has overstepped her bounds. This sounds like a very unorganized clinic with so many "nurses" talking to you with different stories. I agree to file a complaint, if this nurse is licensed she could very well lose her license for making statements like that, however, based on her behavior, I doubt she is licensed. I used to work at an emergency vet as a technician, and as horrible as it is, you just can't treat animals without payment, it is a business and not a free clinic. However, my emergency clinic I worked at used to work with the owners as best they could to try to at least get pain medications on board if the owners couldn't afford treatment. Often we would wave the exam fee in order to give pain meds and antibiotics or else give the pain meds for free just to help the pet. This is one of the hardest parts of veterinary medicine, having to turn people away because they can't pay. However, vets have to pay their bills, we don't have a government to step in and pay the bills for people who can't pay them like we do in human medicine (although many humans also have to go without treatment due to inability to afford a doctor visit and/or medications). Its a perfect example of why you should not have a pet if you can't afford to take care of it, a pet is a privilege and people seem to forget that. In this case, this vet sounds like a less than respectable place, but even the top vets in the country won't (and can't ) provide treatment without payment, its the sad truth. In human medicine, you can't just walk into a doctors office with a broken leg, ask for an exam and treatment, and then leave without paying. You likely wouldn't even be accepted for an exam without proof of insurance. A grocery store would never give a starving homeless person who walked in a basket and say here fill this up with groceries you don't need to pay. Its the same idea. Unfortunately people seem to forget pets cost money, you have to budget for emergencies, apply for care credit, don't own a pet if you can't afford a visit to an emergency clinic at least once or twice in the pet's life. On two occasions, with two different dogs I have had to charge $2000+ in emergency vet bills. Its just part of owning a pet that many owners forget or choose to ignore. *stepping off my soapbox now* Sorry for the rant but as a veterinary technician I hate hearing statements like "they only care about the money". It simply isn't true (except maybe with this vet by the sound of your experiences!).
I just want to make you feel a bit better about Jogi's experience as well. The medication they give to induce vomiting (apomorphine) is a morphine derivative and is likely the cause of his lethargic behavior when he left the vet. His experience was likely not as traumatic as it seemed, I'm guessing you got the worse part of the bargain having to deal with these horrible techs! Did you ever even get to talk to a doctor the whole time? Glad to hear your baby is ok! Leave it to a corgi to eat too much lol.
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