Tina and Gracie (GA)
Member Since 2017
I meant to post this sooner, but of course I forgot.
When Gracie was at the vet last week they did some blood work. When the technician brought her back into the room I noticed her chest was wet and smelled like rubbing alcohol. I also saw a wrap about her lower limb.
The technician explained that they tried to get blood from her chest first, but Gracie was not having it. This was new to me. I expressed some concern, as she was now licking the area. Yeah, maybe I’m being over-protective, but how common is this (poking the chest)?
Also, is it appropriate for me to say something? My gut says yes, but I also have a tendency to snap at times.
In the medical world, we can only poke twice (unless it is an emergency). I just assume that if I don’t know the patient I better be able to get it on the first try, or find a more experienced phlebotomist. Poking a patient twice can upset the patient. I assume there would be common sense in veterinary world too.
When Gracie was at the vet last week they did some blood work. When the technician brought her back into the room I noticed her chest was wet and smelled like rubbing alcohol. I also saw a wrap about her lower limb.
The technician explained that they tried to get blood from her chest first, but Gracie was not having it. This was new to me. I expressed some concern, as she was now licking the area. Yeah, maybe I’m being over-protective, but how common is this (poking the chest)?
Also, is it appropriate for me to say something? My gut says yes, but I also have a tendency to snap at times.
In the medical world, we can only poke twice (unless it is an emergency). I just assume that if I don’t know the patient I better be able to get it on the first try, or find a more experienced phlebotomist. Poking a patient twice can upset the patient. I assume there would be common sense in veterinary world too.