Jump to content

PatricksMom

Members
  • Posts

    2,475
  • Joined

Posts posted by PatricksMom

  1. Honestly, from everything I've read here, I'd be asking my adoption group to take my dog (they're right across the state border) while I had him properly medically checked out, just to be on the safe side, you never know what animal control will do and getting the dog out of state is safest if that's geographically reasonable. Once you're sure your dog is safe and if it turns out there's nothing medically wrong, I would get professional behavioral help.

     

    Is it possible something negative happened between your dog and the dog walker? Not that the walker necessarily did something, but maybe something really scary happened on a walk and now there's a bad association in your dog's mind for some reason.

     

    Some hope too, when we first adopted Patrick, his thyroid levels were low but he seemed asymptomatic. Until he bit me in the face for apparently no reason. Fortunately, I was fine and the city/state didn't find out. Once we medicated him, he never did it again, although he would get growly with me if the generic changed, switching to name brand Soloxine cleared that up and for some reason he never got growly with anyone else. So there can be easily treatable medical issues that can cause this behavior.

  2. This won't help when you're out with Padfoot, but I suggest taking a picture every time you see the dog off leash and you safely can, and send it to your rental office. We had to do this and it helped, plus you'll be creating a "paper" trail if you do have to kick the dog to keep Padfoot safe or if there is an encounter.

     

    I'm sorry you're dealing with this. Off leash, aggressive dogs make our work with Leo so much harder, although he's still doing remarkably well.

  3. Granted, Leo has other issues, and we are using an anti-anxiety medication, and a kong, and a belly band....and sometimes he still pees in his crate.

     

    But, what seems to have helped recently to tip the balance is playing NPR while we're gone. If the new boy is hearing something that's scaring him, maybe some talk radio would help smooth over the scary sounds. Is he showing any signs of fear/anxiety about anything else in his daily life?

  4. I'm so sorry you lost your beautiful Nadier. He loved you so much and he knew how much he loved you. As impossible as it seems in the moment, and I know personally, he would want you to remember everything you did for him and not beat yourself up. They all go to soon, no matter what we do. Be gentle with yourself, just like you would be gentle with any of us facing your circumstances.

  5. I would also do a vet visit, check for pain, thyroid issues, anything else the vet thinks might be going on with him. Keep in mind how you would feel if you were hurting and someone walked up and kept touching you and making it worse, no matter how many times you told them to stop.

     

    If nothing medical comes up, keep in mind that many greyhounds don't react well to being petted while lying down, particularly when they are newly off the track and still adjusting to being disturbed in that way. It may be your friend pushed him too far, too many times. You'll likely get better advice from more experienced people here than me about learning to work with him.

  6. Welcome to GT and I'm sorry, I know how stressful it is to find health problems in a newly adopted dog.

     

    She should handle the loss in the long-term just fine, there are dogs who have had all their teeth extracted and manage just fine. I would talk to your vet about antibiotics (I think most prefer them with that level of dental disease) and whether or not they have Amicar on hand in case of bleeding issues.

  7.  

    I think you've hit the nail on the head on why some vets may charge a prescription fee. However, compensating for loss revenue may be essential to staying in business, not just maintaining profits. Generally speaking, profit margins of vet clinics are relatively low compared to other small businesses and human medical offices. While I would agree with you that a $20 fee per prescription seems high, your vet may have felt they had no other choice when faced with declining pharmacy sales. Would you prefer to have the price of exams or procedures doubled instead? Because as the veterinary profession changes, with shifts such as drug sales going to outside pharmacies, decrease in vaccines due to extended protocols, and basic care being offered by shelters and low-cost programs, that may be the way we're headed if vet clinics are going to stay afloat.

    I guess it depends. I seriously don't want to have to think about my total vet bills over the last 2 years and I've never had a problem paying a higher rate to have a good vet and a clinic backing them up (the ability to do the more advanced tests in house is valuable to me and I understand that runs costs up). But charging a prescription fee (which in my case with both Patrick and Murphy at $10 would have been more than the cost of the medicine itself, so more than doubling my monthly bill--I think at $10 it would have been something like $60/month in those fees alone) feels like nickle and diming. And the one vet practice I saw that did that, was a terrible practice, the lower costs overall were absolutely not worth the poor care. On the other hand, both Patrick's care at the University of Pennsylvania and Murphy's care by several board certified surgeons down here was not cheap (but totally worth it), but none of them charged to write a script.

     

    I teach, and this feels like teaching my class for their tuition, but charging extra money to meet with them in office hours.

  8. This is a hot topic within the industry now. There's actually a bill trying to be passed in nj that a veterinary clinic must offer outside scripts. We don't charge to write scripts but, IMO we should to offset our time. You must understand that the receptionist gets numerous script requests daily-most from online pharmacys. She must pull charts, hunt down a Dr ( believe me on a busy day you're afraid to approach them)-get the approval or denial-double check that the dosage etc is correct-doesn't interfere with another current drug (the tech or reception does this as the Drs are entirely too busy to do so)-call the script in (deal with the idiot pharmacy techs) or fax back and finally place the script log in the chart and the computer. All this while she's answering phones and assisting visiting clients. Don't even get me started on insurance forms. We do understand that some medications are less expensive at humans pharmacys and we try very hard to accommodate clients but, should there be a small charge to offset our receptionist/tech time idk.

    So do you pay your doctor for his/her time when s/he writes you a script, beyond the cost of the appointments where your medications are decided on and monitored?

  9.  

    Because they work and every dog is different. We have had 8 greyhounds in our house and every one of them respected the baby gate.

     

    Until it is established that a baby gate will not work for a particular dog, it should be considered as a valid way to keep a dog in or out of an area in your home.

    Heck, Patrick was detered by a body pillow across the doorway. :)

  10. If you use reward-based training, your dog doesn't view responding to cues (I much prefer the term cue to command in part for this very reason) as work, they view them as an opportunity to earn rewards. Cues are just words we assign the let the dog know what behavior we'd like them to do. Your dog doesn't care if you use the word "sit" or "blue cheese" to mean put your butt on the ground, they don't understand the English language, they just learn over time that if I do this behavior (put my butt on the ground) when my person says this word ("sit", or "blue cheese", your choice :P) then it's very likely I will receive a reward for doing so. Over time, with the continual pairing of the reward with the behavior in response to the cue, the cue actually becomes a reinforcer itself. This is why behavior chaining works.

     

    As for your second point, no you don't want to force anything, but I would focus on getting and reinforcing eye contact. Teach name response is as simple as waiting for the dog to make eye contact with you, clicking and treating. Once the dog is giving me prolonged eye contact (ie. he's catching on), I'll start tossing the treat away and onto the ground after clicking. After he eats the treat, his most likely response is going to be to look back at you to see if you've got more treats. Click and treat. When you're fairly positive that he's going ot look back at you after getting the treat, say his name right before he looks back (when he's almost done eating). Now you've got name recall on cue. Then you can move on to building duration.

     

    ETA: I like the clicker for teaching name response, at least initially because at the very beginning you may only get a quick glance from him. Your training will go much faster if you can click at the moment he gives you that eye contact. Once he's got the idea the clicker becomes less important. And when you start building duration it probably makes less sense - at that point, verbally praising for continued eye contact with periodic feeding (that you space out over long durations as you progress) is sufficient.

    If I can intrude, I thought that dogs found direct eye contact to be threatening? We've been training Leo and Henry when we do"look at me" to look at our hand on our chest, not to look us right in the eyes. Is this incorrect?

  11. The Trifexis must taste horrible....I know it doesn't smell good! I usually cut the tabs up in quarters, and hide them in cream cheese - works for us. My pups are pretty food motivated, so they pretty much swallow them whole. I wish I could be a "pill" person, but I just can't do that to them.

    It must depend--my boys think they're getting a special treat, no disguising Trifexis necessary.

×
×
  • Create New...