Health Certs & Holiday Turkeys: Surviving the Thanksgiving Travel Rush in Vet Med
Ah, Thanksgiving…
A time for gratitude, family gatherings, pumpkin pie, and…
A massive wave of last-minute requests for health certificates.
If you’ve worked a single November in vet med, you already know:
The only thing more chaotic than the Thanksgiving grocery store is the clinic the week before the holiday.
Here are some sanity-saving tips, tricks, and tactics to help you glide through the health certificate season with grace – or at least without hiding under the exam table.
Ask the Most Important Question: “Domestic or International?”
Nothing says “holiday panic” like a client casually revealing they’re “just popping over to Mexico with their fur baby for Thanksgiving.”
Domestic = predictable.
International = paperwork that ages you five years.
Always clarify the destination early so no one ends up needing USDA endorsement on the day before Thanksgiving.
We don’t recover from that.
Create a Thanksgiving Health Certificate Checklist
Make it festive if you want, whatever makes you sane…but be sure to include:
- Travel date
- Airline requirements
- Destination rules
- Vaccines required
- Microchip info
- Parasite prevention timelines
- Whether USDA endorsement is required
- Emergency contact (that the client actually answers)
Let techs begin collecting everything before the doctor walks in.
Efficiency = gratitude.
Save Templates Like They’re Thanksgiving Leftovers
Keep pre-filled templates for:
- Domestic travel
- Interstate travel
- International travel
- Repeat clients who travel every year
If you’re using digital platforms like VEHCS, lean on auto-fill.
If you’re still on paper…light a candle and pray.
Double-Check Airline Requirements (Because Clients Usually Don’t)
Clients will absolutely tell you the airline said:
“Just bring a letter saying she’s healthy.”
That was not the airline.
That was a sleep-deprived misunderstanding.
A quick online check now can save you from a Thanksgiving Eve meltdown.
Make Microchip Verification Step #1
You do NOT want to discover at the end of the appointment that:
- The chip won’t scan
- The number doesn’t match
- The pet is chipped under the owner’s ex’s name
- Or the owner brought the WRONG DOG (it happens)
Scan early.
Save your sanity.
Pre-Appointment Calls Are Your Best Friend
Just like Grandma reminding everyone what dish to bring, call clients beforehand:
“Please bring vaccine records, microchip information, and all previous certificates.”
Will they still forget?
Maybe.
But at least you tried – and it helps more often than you’d think.
Set Boundaries for Last-Minute Requests
Thanksgiving week is not the time to accept every same-day H/C with open arms.
Consider policies like:
- Same-day health certificates are subject to availability and a rush fee
- Required vaccines must be completed X days before travel
Boundaries keep your schedule from turning into cranberry-flavored chaos.
Celebrate the Wins
Got a complicated international certificate done on time?
Finished a VECHS submission without tears?
Successfully navigated a client who didn’t know what country they were flying to?
Celebrate! High-fives. Victory snacks. A second slice of pie (with extra whipped cream).
YOU DESERVE IT.
Final ThoughtS
Thanksgiving is a time for gratitude – and in vet med, that gratitude often looks like:
- A client who brought most of the required paperwork.
- A microchip that scanned on its first try
- An airline that clearly lists its requirements (a rare blessing)
- A health certificate completed BEFORE the first day of travel
With planning, clear communication, and well-placed boundaries, your clinic can handle Thanksgiving travel season like seasoned pros.
And remember: Nothing pairs with turkey quite like a completed, USDA-enforced health certificate.
Revenue Per Veterinarian: How to Understand, Monitor, and Improve
Revenue Per Veterinarian: How to Understand, Monitor, and ImproveAs a veterinary practice manager, you have chosen a fulfilling and impactful career dedicated to the well-being of animals. However, like any business, veterinary clinics must also focus on profitability...
Understanding the Costs of Operating a Veterinary Clinic
Understanding the Costs of Operating a Veterinary ClinicOperating a veterinary clinic can be both a rewarding and challening venture. While it's a noble profession that is dedicated to the well-being of animals, running a clinic comes with various operational costs...
Behind the Front Desk: Veterinary Receptionists
Behind the Front Desk: Veterinary ReceptionistsBeing a veterinary receptionist isn't just about answering phones and booking appointments. Oh no, it's an art form. It's a blend of multitasking, emotional support, and the ability to not laugh when someone insists their...
Finding Support as a Practice Manager
Finding Support as a Practice ManagerAs rewarding as being a veterinary practice manager can be, it is not a role without challenges. As you juggle the responsibilities of overseeing the day-to-day operations, managing staff, and ensuring excellent patient care, it's...
The Top 7 Things Veterinarians Wish Their Clients Knew
The 7 Top Things Vets Wish Their Clients KnewAlthough pet owners wants the best for their furry friends, sometimes there can be a gap in communication between veterinarians and pet parents. This void can make visits less effective and stressful for all parties...
Confessions of a Canine
Confessions of a CanineIt is a typical Sunday morning, I am laying down at my humans' feet while they eat. I am patiently waiting for one of them to give me a bite of their yummy human food when all of a sudden, I start getting itchy. As the morning goes on, it gets...