gprellwitz
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2005
- Messages
- 12,774
- Location
- Romeoville, IL
- Display Name
Display name:
Grant Prellwitz
Sorry, John. Blessings to you and Leslie.
Sorry, John. Blessings to you and Leslie.
Do you have any pictures of Moose?
Best thing you can do for any pet is get pet insurance, in a time of illness, you don't hesitate twice when it comes to treatment for your animal, some plans off 90% back but of course you pay.
Yeah, but... when they are suffering.... we humans ( caretakers of furry friends) sometimes need to make difficult decisions...... Money and insurance will not buy quality life for our little fur friends... IMHO/..
Ps.. Thanks Henning for the comment.. it is DAMN quiet in my house tonight....
Really sorry to hear this Ben. I am a pet lover too, each one that leaves us is like losing a child. She had a good life with you and I'm sure gave you a lot of love in return. That's all any of us can hope for.
BTW- Kidney failure has taken my last three cats, all VERY well treated. I believe its pretty common.
It wouldn't surprise me to find it being the primary health related cause of death in cats.
thread resurect....
Got the kitty 9 years ago from the pound.. Poor thing must have been seriously abused as it took about two years till she actually became comfortable with people.. I gave her a great life ... and she knew it.. Last month she seems a bit slow so off the vets... Tests showed kidney failing.. probably when she was starved before we got her... On Tues she quit eating and drinking..
I have not slept more then a 1/2 hour at a time making sure she was comfortable.. Took her to the vets on Fri and they gave her an IV, shot of steroids, one to keep her from throwing up and antibiotic... She rallied till mid day Sat and then cratered again.. Stayed up all last night carrying her to her water and food bowl and kitty box..... This morning she gave me that look....... Took her back to the vet and stopped her suffering... At 9:15 AM she left us.... Built a little coffin and dug a grave in 4 feet of snow and frozen ground...
Kitters was a GOOD kitty....
I am a serious animal person, Have had St Bernards all my life.. Large breed, lovable as hell but limited life span.. Usually the heart gives out.. My first cat (critter) made it 21 years... Died 10 years ago at home in the midlle of the night with me holding her on Groundhogs day.. Kitters died on Groundhog day.. Weird huh???..
Costs do add up. I am not against paying wherever is needed if there will be a successful resolution.. Kitters was estimated to be 7-10 years when we got her so she was at the tail end of a good life and IMHO the best path was to let her go....
Vets are getting expensive too.. During the divorce, my attorney had a forensic accountant go through our checking account.. I just let the ex do her thing since she is an accountant and she was responsible for vet stuff.. I trusted her...
Turns out in a 8 year period, the bills for 3 St Bernards and a couple of cats added up to over 26,000.00.....
The vet we used (were) nice people . Husband and wife operation.. We were their first customer back in 1992.. I just assumed they were treating us right. Their business ( Spring Creek Animal Hospital) grew over the years..
Up until a month ago kitters was real healthy.. The office visit a month ago was 180.00.. Then 3 weeks ago was the basic blood test, office visit was 300.00..
The last Friday the office visit, IV, 3 shots and 1 small can of food 180.00 . I just went to town and paid my last bill for putting her down.. I was in the office for maybe 10 minutes.. 1 shot of sedative to calm her, 1 shot of propafal and one shot of the yellow stuff that did the poor kitty in....
203.00..
I need to find a cheaper vet as I also went to the pound this morning and looked at some cats as my house is WAY too quiet for me, and eventually I am getting another fur child...
God as my witness, I NEVER thought I would live this long, in fact I was pretty sure kitters would have outlived me... Funny how life plays out...
How much do you think a Vet should earn, and what corners do you think he should cut to keep prices down? Or is there a 3rd option that I haven't figured out yet?
The two biggest complaints I get are "you cost too much" and "it takes tool long to get an appointment". These usually come from the same people. I always want to ask them which problem I should address because fixing either one will make the other one worse.
Possibly, but my philosophy is "The customer may be wrong, but you never win an argument with a customer". So I save my arguments for POA.You should go ahead and ask them, make them think.
How much do you think a Vet should earn, and what corners do you think he should cut to keep prices down? Or is there a 3rd option that I haven't figured out yet?
The two biggest complaints I get are "you cost too much" and "it takes tool long to get an appointment". These usually come from the same people. I always want to ask them which problem I should address because fixing either one will make the other one worse.
Whatever the market can bear... Free enterprise and all...... Unless the yellow stuff in god awful expensive. it is hard to guess what vets pharma costs are..
As a commercial contractor with ALOT of fixed costs I can say I would be out of business tomorrow if I charged 1200.00 an hour.....
This practice has 5 vets with usually 3 working 10 hour shifts.... 36 grand a day in gross income is a nice operation IMHO.... That's 13+ milllion a year..
Ps.. I just did a little research and there are now 4 other vets I didn't even know existed.. The best and the most reasonable will get ALL my future business....
So. to answer your question.....
The market will decide for you....
You have stumbled upon a hidden truth.I've found some vets to be very reasonable with the cost of the pharmacy stuff and others insanely ridiculously over priced. If the cost of something they say my animal needs seems high to me, then I just call a people pharmacy and ask what the drug costs. If it's MUCH less than the vet I ask the vet for a prescription I can fill at the people pharmacy. If they won't give me one - then I find a new vet.
You have stumbled upon a hidden truth.
But just because one vet marks his pharmaceuticals up more than another vet, that doesn't mean the other vet doesn't make up for it by jacking up his exam or surgery fees. Similar quality vets have similar costs and they have to meet those costs somehow. So if one vet is always less expensive than another you have cause to wonder where he is cutting corners.
I have been asked why I charge $25 for a rabies shot when the vet down the road charges $15. It is because the vaccine I use costs me $14 and the one he uses costs $2.10. I get an $11 markup and he gets a $12.90 markup. Yes, he saves you $11, but guess which vaccine is more likely to have a serious reaction.
And here is another hidden truth: "Almost all vets are wonderful people and good doctors, but most of the ones I know are terrible businessmen". They undercharge for some stuff and overcharge for other stuff and they often don't even know it.
Oh, and our cost structure for pharmaceuticals is exactly the same as human hospitals. Most of the time, the drugs are exactly the same although we may have to pay extra to get them compounded in suitable animal strengths. And vets rarely get big quantity discounts.
And here is my last hidden truth for today: A very big part of the reason vets are getting expensive is because people demand it. If I didn't offer ultrasound and in-house laboratory diagnostics, people would go elsewhere.
Understand. I don't mind paying 30% more or so for a one time prescription from a vet. It's convenient to get it right there. Awhile back one tried to charge me 300% over what it would cost at Walgreens. In that case, I had to tell him to either sell it to me more reasonably, let me fill it at walgreens, or lose me as a customer.
Uh, no. malpractice insurance for vets is so low I don't even recall exactly what I pay. I think it is about $500 per year (That would be ~$1,500 for my three doctors). Perhaps one reason is that we don't commit malpractice as often! But seriously, it is because the laws consider pets as property and the liability claims are relatively miniscule compared to human doctors that might have to pay scores of thousands for trimming a fingernail too close.Just for reference.....
I called the other 4 vet operations in town today....
So to add apples to apples here is what I asked for....
I have a 7 lb cat,, I will schedule an appointment at your convienence, show up on time, place cat on exam table. you do your thing 10 minutes later, I roll my cat up in a towel I brought, put her back in my cat cage and leave ......
What will be the charges...
Vet 1 - 78.00
Vet2 - 66.00
Vet3 - 59.00
Vet4 - 88.00
All I need to do now is visit all those 4 clinics, meet the staff and docs and see which one I will use from now on... Ya see, I am a VERY Loyal customer when I don't get screwed...
Ps... John, thanks for all the feedback on this matter....
I am curious though,, how much do vets pay for their medical malpractice insurance premium.... Is it as high a people doctors?
Uh, no. malpractice insurance for vets is so low I don't even recall exactly what I pay. I think it is about $500 per year (That would be ~$1,500 for my three doctors). Perhaps one reason is that we don't commit malpractice as often! But seriously, it is because the laws consider pets as property and the liability claims are relatively miniscule compared to human doctors that might have to pay scores of thousands for trimming a fingernail too close.
Just for reference.....
I called the other 4 vet operations in town today....
So to add apples to apples..... here is what I asked for....
I have a 7 lb cat,, I will schedule an appointment at your convienence, show up on time, place cat on exam table. you do your thing..... 10 minutes later, I roll my cat up in a towel I brought, put her back in my cat cage and leave ......
What will be the charges...
Vet 1 - 78.00
Vet2 - 66.00
Vet3 - 59.00
Vet4 - 88.00
All I need to do now is visit those 4 clinics, meet the staff and docs and see which one lke and I will use from now on... Ya see, I am a VERY Loyal customer when I don't get screwed...
Ps... John, thanks for all the feedback on this matter....
I am curious though,, how much do vets pay for their medical malpractice insurance premium.... Is it as high a people doctors?
Possibly, but my philosophy is "The customer may be wrong, but you never win an argument with a customer". So I save my arguments for POA.
Uh, no. malpractice insurance for vets is so low I don't even recall exactly what I pay. I think it is about $500 per year (That would be ~$1,500 for my three doctors). Perhaps one reason is that we don't commit malpractice as often! But seriously, it is because the laws consider pets as property and the liability claims are relatively miniscule compared to human doctors that might have to pay scores of thousands for trimming a fingernail too close.