Choosing a good Reptile
Vet.
How do you pick a reptile vet? Doing
so can be tough as, if you don't know much about handling and care, how
can you assess someone else's knowledge? Here are a few clues, however,
that should help.
Ask other herp owners in the area; check with the herp society membership.
Talk to the vet's office and see how much of their practice is in herps,
generally, your reptile in particular. Note that vets will not have seen
many of the more recent popular animals such as bearded, Uro's, skinks,
even chammies so if you have one of these animals, this may not be a deciding
factor. I know of at least one vet who has lied about this - his wife
sort of blew it with a client when she asked if she could touch the client's
iguana, saying she hadn't seen one in years. Considering that this wife
works as her husband's receptionist, and that he is now advertising himself
as a reptile vet, this clued the client in right away that she was in
trouble! (As it is, the vet pooh-poohed the idea of taking blood and so
did not detect the onset of kidney failure, and failing to recognize the
physical signs, sent the client home with a broad-spectrum antibiotic.)
Ask what special training and continuing education they have done.
Do they subscribe to the Journal of Small Exotic Animal Medicine?
Belong to the Association of Reptilian and Amphibian Veterinarians (ARAV)?
Attend reptile veterinary conferences? Do they belong to any herp societies?
What reptile veterinary reference books do they have? (Some top names
include Fredrick Frye's Biomedical and Surgical Aspects of Reptiles; Frye's
Reptile Care (both are huge two volume sets); Douglas Mader's Reptile
Medicine and Surgery).
When you meet them, are they comfortable with the handling and examining
the animal, or are they nervous, tentative, jerking away when the animal
moves suddenly?
Do they ask how you are housing and feeding the reptiles?
Do they listen to you?
Do they take their time with or rush you out the door?
Don't confuse a brusque "bedside" manner with incompetence or lack of
care, but do pay attention to clues that may indicate that this vet isn't
keeping up with the literature. Ultimately, it is a combination of gut
response and checking and rechecking... and results.
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