New Years Eve and Anxious Pets – Best Steps to Keep Your Pet Safe and Happy
It happens every year, your veterinary clinic starts getting an increased amount of calls from owners who are wanting to bring in their pets to get sedatives for the fireworks we all know will happen on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s day. All too often, pet owners wait until the last minute to try to call and schedule, leaving you with an overbooked schedule and upset clients who cannot get in. As much as we can try to prepare for this annual occurrence, it can seem somewhat unavoidable.
With New Years Eve rapidly approaching, it might be a good idea to start reaching out to clients now to remind and inform them of how quickly the schedule will be booking up. As much as you try to preemptively communicate with clients, it is almost guaranteed that you will still receive an influx of sedative requests in the days leading up to New Year’s Eve. Work with your veterinarians and veterinary medical staff to ensure your sedative inventory is adequate for the drastic increase of prescriptions your clinic will be sending home. In order to further prepare your clinic, a protocol should be established ahead of time. Establishing a clear process for managing sedative requests can ensure consistency. Your clinic’s protocol should include when a consultation will be required for a sedative prescription (for example, if the pet has been seen within the last year and has a previous sedative prescription – a prescription can be filled without a consultation), limits on the number of prescriptions per client, and when veterinary receptionists should offer alternative suggestions such as behavioral modifications or calming products.
As a veterinary receptionist, your role in handling sedative requests during New Year’s Eve is critical to maintaining both the health and safety of pets and the satisfaction of clients. By staying organized, managing expectations, setting protocols, and communicating clearly, you can help ensure a smooth process during a busy and stressful time for pets, their owners, and the veterinary staff.
Triage: Where Medicine Meets Mayhem (and You’re the Traffic Controller)
Triage: Where Medicine Meets Mayhem (and You're the Traffic Controller)Working in vet med means you wear a lot of hats - diagnostician, counselor, detective, animal whisperer. But one of the most underrated (and most stressful) roles? Triage Officer of Chaos. Whether...
Bloat in the Building: What Every Veterinary Team Member Should Know About GDV
Bloat in the Building: What Every Veterinary Team Member Should Know About GDVWhen a GDV case hits the clinic, the whole atmosphere changes. The clock ticks louder and the pace quickens. Everyone - from reception to recovery - has a role to play. Gastric...
Fourth of July: Celebrating our Vet Med Dependence
Fourth of July: Celebrating our Vet Med DependenceThis Independence Day, let's be honest: We're not exactly off the grid grilling hot dogs in flag shorts. Some of us are working. Some of us are on call. Some of us are pretending to enjoy fireworks while...
Vet Med Affirmations: Because You Deserve to Hear it
Vet Med Affirmations: Because You Deserve to Hear itWorking in vet med is not for the faint of heart; it's for the fierce, the compassionate, the caffeine-fueled warriors who do it all while dodging claws, cleaning "surprises," and explaining again why heartworm...
Wag Interrupted: The Tale of the Summer Tail Flop
Wag Interrupted: The Tale of the Summer Tail FlopIf your summer schedule is filling up with dogs who suddenly "won't wag their tail," you're not imagining it - swimmer's tail season is officially upon us. Every year, as the weather warms up and the lakes and...
Things We Say to Pets That Would Get us Fired if Said to Humans
Things We Say to Pets That Would Get us Fired if Said to HumansLet's be honest: working in vet med means having entire conversations with patients who can't talk back (well...except for that one Dachshund, and we don't talk about him anymore). Over time, we develop a...