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Treating a sick animal is like solving a mystery, said
12-year veterinarian Ralph Yerex. The doctors can't ask their
patient questions, so they have to deduce the cause of an illness by
piecing together clues.
In one
difficult case, a dog experienced weakness that went away until
several months later when he fell down and couldn't get up. Yerex
suspected a rare neurological disorder was the culprit and testing
at a clinic proved him right.
"I
love my job," Yerex said. "The detective work is really cool." Veterinarians
like Yerex consider their job a calling, a way to help animals.
Vets spend 8 to 10 years attending college and veterinary school,
and their work-weeks often exceed 50 hours, with some newer vets
working 12 hours a day.
Yerex
earned his bachelor's degree in chemistry at the University of Wisconsin,
River Falls, and went to Scotland to study at Glasgow Veterinary
School, legendary veterinarian James Herriot's alma mater. Today's
veterinarian has a lot more tools at his or her disposal than Herriot
did, because medical technologies introduced for use on people have
entered the veterinary field. Ten years ago, Yerex said, he was
one of the first vets to use cardiac and abdominal ultrasound in
the Seattle area. Now, he said, "People are expecting this for their
pets."
Despite
the advances, many people can't pay to treat their animals, because
their pets don't have the same health insurance they do. Occasionally,
a pet owner will ask Yerex to put an animal to sleep instead of
treating a health or behavior problem. He refuses, because he will
only euthanize an animal for medical reasons. Taking an animal's
life is the hardest part of the job, he said.
Several
years ago, Yerex and another veterinarian opened the Brassfield
Animal Hospital in Greensboro, N.C. Managing 11 full-time and part-time
staff members is a lot of responsibility, Yerex said. He eventually
hired an office manager, so the business side of the practice wouldn't
dominate too much of his time.
Yerex's
partner, Hunter Hodges, is certified in acupuncture. Used for years
on race and show horses, acupuncture and other Eastern practices
are becoming more common in the treatment of small animals, Yerex
said. Acupuncture can relieve pain, stimulate appetite and treat
symptoms, said veterinarian Lisa Beagan, who is taking a class in
the alternative therapy. "It's nice in cases when you have no options
in Western medicine."
Beagan
treats small animals at the Hoffman Animal Hospital in Annapolis,
Md. She started her career as co-owner of an equine practice in
Maine. She liked being able to set her own schedule and work outside,
but she was always on call and even had a fax machine in her bedroom
so she could get lab results quickly. "It didn't leave much time
for a family life," she said.
Beagan
recently cut back on her hours at the hospital to work part-time
at Vetcentric.com, a veterinary Web site. She was a math major in
college and worked at General Electric for six years after graduating,
so the job draws from her knowledge of business and animal medicine.
Beagan said many of her classmates at the Tufts University veterinary
school also were career changers.
Kim
Thomas, co-founder of Vetcentric.com, was going to attend medical
school after receiving her bachelor's degree in biology, but decided
to stick with her dream of treating animals. Doctors have to specialize,
she said, while vets get to take on every medical role from orthopedic
surgeon to cardiologist to anesthesiologist. At Greater Annapolis
Veterinary Hospital, Thomas works with eight other veterinarians
treating small animals.
"It's
a fantastic profession," said Thomas, who has practiced for three
years after earning her doctorate in veterinary medicine (D.V.M.)
at the University of Tennessee. Like many other veterinarians, she
has wanted to work with animals since childhood, and volunteered
and later worked in a vet's office before attending veterinary school.
Eric
Griesshaber researched cockatiels and worked with an equine veterinarian
before he became a small animal vet. His veterinary school at the
University of California at Davis wanted him to check out the different
paths an animal doctor can take. They can work in meat inspection,
disease prevention, traditional practices, and more. When he graduated
three years ago, he chose to work with small animals at a San Jose,
Calif., practice owned by a corporation rather than a privately
run office. The company, Veterinary Centers of America, Inc., offered
good benefits and the predictability of working in an environment
that abided by corporate standards, he said.
Griesshaber
recommends that aspiring vets hone their customer service skills.
Veterinarians spend a lot of time talking to people about their
pets and comforting them if an animal is gravely ill. "Dogs and
cats are part of the family," he said.
While
he thrives on the challenges of difficult cases, Griesshaber is
frustrated when he can't figure out the cause of an animal's symptoms
or when a pet can't be cured. "You have to learn that not everything
is fixable," he said.
So
if you have a love for animals and a scientific mind, consider dedicating
your life to saving humankind's best friends...and dream on!
-
Lauren Wiley, Salary.com Contributor
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