T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1971.1 | once you've caught her, its a piece of cake! | MYVAX::LUBY | DTN 287-3204 | Tue Nov 15 1988 12:27 | 16 |
|
Its called the sneak attack.
First, Be real nice to her. I assume you can approach her, providing
you have no "nasty" intentions. Then, take her into the bathroom,
or other small room where she can't escape from you. Bring your
husband. Then, one of you hold the cat firmly. The other, pull
the head way back, and with one finger, open the mouth. With the
head pulled way back, the bottom jaw is (usually) easy to open.
Then, with the dropper, squirt the medicine to the back of the throat,
allow the mouth to close, and stroke the cats throat to make sure
it swallows.
Simple!
Karen
|
1971.2 | Why can't they all be like Portia? | WITNES::MACONE | It's the story of a man named Brady | Tue Nov 15 1988 12:34 | 17 |
| Elmo has been a holy terror, expecially when it comes time for his
pink drops for the sneezies. We start with shaking the Pounce can.
Once the devil is starting to eat the Pouncer, boyfriend grabs
hold of devil. Let devil finsih eating Pouncer. I get dropper
full of pink drops. Larry picks up cat, wedges cats lower body
between my legs. Larry restrains cats arms with one hand and opens
cats mouth with other hand. I take free hand and help to pry cats
mouth open. Larry and I curse and call Elmo names that cannot be
written in this conference. Finally get cats mouth open and quickly
drop pink droppies in devils mouth while devil get an arm free and
tears apart mom's nylons since mom is already late for work. Larry
and I drop cat, run and hide in bathroom until cat has calmed down.
Mom goes and changes pantyhose. Elmo eats more pouncers and calls
mom and dad names that cannot be printed in this conference.
Does this help?
|
1971.3 | Are you my Mommy? | SWAT::COCHRANE | Scattering like light. | Tue Nov 15 1988 12:52 | 17 |
| re: .1
Yes, I'm trying to make sure I approach her several times
a days for "loves and cuddles" only. This way, she doesn't
start equating my presence with the administering of unpleasant
drugs. What with having to clean her eyes and nose daily, put the
ointment in her eyes and now give her the antibiotics, I'm sure
she wishes she could have stayed in her old home! This cat fakes
better than a quarterback too!!! She ran through both my husband
and I to get to the entertainment center this morning!
I talked to my vet as well, and she said if we can't get anywhere
with the drops, to come back and get tablets that we can crush up
in her food when she eats. Knowing her, though, the little @#$%^&
probably wouldn't touch it!!
Mary-Michael
|
1971.4 | | FSHQA2::RWAXMAN | A Cat Makes a Purrfect Friend | Tue Nov 15 1988 14:19 | 10 |
| When Nikki had upper respiratory, the vet gave me clavamox, a liquid
antibiotic, which I mixed in with his food twice a day. He ate!
At first they gave me pills (Tribrisin) which I tried to hide in
his food or a Bonker, but he wouldn't eat. This was all at a time
when he first joined our household and was really skittish and still
distrustful of people. I would recommend the liquid antibiotic
to mix in with the food and feed her seperately.
Hope it works.
|
1971.5 | Hmmmmm where are those beach towels? | DRFIX::IVES | | Tue Nov 15 1988 14:58 | 14 |
| We have always used our big bath sheets to fold around the cat
with only the head sticking out, and that gives 3 free hands to
get the drops in the mouth. "Sometimes" you don't have to open
the mouth all the way but pull out the corner and put the dropper
in there and squeeze quickly, making sure to keep the mouth closed
and the head back somewhat.
I know it's easier said then done. When the cat feels better and
returns to it's usual self it sure is worth all the agrivation
and trouble.
Keep trying....
Barbara (Mocha will take anything out of your hand and eat it !!)
|
1971.6 | Ain't eye ointment fun? | YOSMTE::CORDESBRO_JO | | Tue Nov 15 1988 16:46 | 15 |
| I always insert the dropper from the side of the mouth. There is
a space where the teeth are shorter leaving a nice medicine dropper
size whole. Put the cat between your legs and squat on him.
I usually squirt the medicine slowly, giving the cat time to swallow
it. Forcing it down their throats can make them choke, and possibly
inhale the medicine, especially if the cat is congested. But, on
the other hand, do what you have to to get the medicine down them.
I think you are doing the right thing by giving the cat lots of
attention when it isn't being medicated.
Good Luck,
Jo
|
1971.7 | She hates me... | SWAT::COCHRANE | Scattering like light. | Tue Nov 15 1988 20:34 | 11 |
| Well, my husband and I got the medicine (mostly) in the cat.
At least the little bit that didn't get *in* the cat got *on* the
cat and she licked it off. I think she hates me now. She ran
underneath the entertainment center and hasn't come out for over
three hours now. I even tried pushing some Sheba under for her,
but she won't even eat. She hasn't eaten all day, she must be
hungry, and I can't cuddle her if she won't come out.
I feel like a failure.
Mary-Michael
|
1971.8 | Don't feel guilty! | AKOV75::BROWN | Eight (cats) is not enough | Wed Nov 16 1988 08:22 | 17 |
| It certainly isn't easy to get medication into our pets (try a 65-lb.
greyhound whose jaw muscles are stronger than my arm muscles), but it
is necessary at times and you just have to be determined to help them.
The attitude of fear and hate for all the unpleasantness that you are
causing them will go away when you finally get to stop, they do seem
to understand that it helped and will forgive you. Sort of like with
real kids I guess, they may hate being taken to the doctor's but it
doesn't last -- and you have to do what's best for them.
We have been through some very painful things with our assorted
menagerie and I think I'm still their favorite person! Keep up the good
work and don't let a negative attitude intimidate you!!
Jan who_went_to_sleep_with_Spats_curled_up_on_her_shoulderblade_last_night
|
1971.9 | Cats don't do grudges! only people do | CUPMK::TRACHMAN | ZhivagoCats, Ltd..The Inn is Full..264-8298 | Wed Nov 16 1988 09:28 | 4 |
| Mary, you did good! They DO know it's for their own good. You
will see, she still loves you best.
E.T.
|
1971.10 | Slight progress!! | SWAT::COCHRANE | Scattering like light. | Wed Nov 16 1988 11:19 | 14 |
| Well, we got her out from behind the entertainment center and she
ran down to the basement, her home away from home, where she hid
underneath the furniture. I went down with some Sheba and shut
the door so the other cats couldn't follow. To make a long story
short, I shoved the Sheba under the furniture and stayed very still.
She ATE!! She GOBBLED!! When she was safely absorbed in eating,
I got up and walked away. As I did she looked at me as if to say,
"You're ok, Mom." This morning, we cuddled a bit and I came down
again before I left and put her ointment in - and she let me!!!
So I guess I'm forgiven until this evening when we do the antiboitic
chore again....
Mary-Michael
|
1971.11 | | WITNES::MACONE | It's the story of a man named Brady | Wed Nov 16 1988 11:25 | 17 |
| Mary-Michael,
Right now my Portia is on 3 or 4 kinds of medicine as well as needing
some ointment. I do it all in the morning, first thing when I get
up, and before I feed breakfast. That way, Portia only "hates"
me once a day, and tehn giving her breakfast is almost like giving
her a treat.
Granted I have had to give Portia medicine more often than not so
she's very used to it and very good about taking it, but she is
always sure to let me know that she doesn't *like* it.
Maybe you might want to try doing the antibiotic and the ointment
at the smae time for Dream. You'll only have to catch her once
then.
-Nancy
|
1971.12 | Ointment and Eardrops? Yuck! | BUFFER::LI | | Wed Nov 16 1988 12:41 | 13 |
| When we first got our kitten, Tashti, he had ear mites and a bacterial
infection in his eyes. That meant ointment for the eyes and drops
for the ears. Boy did he hate it! He'd immediately shake his head
furiously (getting most of the drops all over the place) when we
let him go, and his eyes would look all gooky for hours.
But even though Tashti hated the routine, he was exceptionally well
behaved throughout. It was like he knew what we were doing was
for his own good and sat pretty quietly through it. And he LOVED
the Bonkers we always fed him right afterwards. If you give your
cat a treat afterwards, they won't object so much when you start
administering all that medicine!
|
1971.13 | Anything Dream, you name it! | SWAT::COCHRANE | Scattering like light. | Wed Nov 16 1988 12:51 | 12 |
| I wish she'd take treats! I had to push the food underneath a bureau
to get her to eat!!! :-) She also has a wonderful Siamese-type
meow - "ow..ow..OWWOOWWW......" So it always sounds like we're killing
her. I had her in the bathroom last night and she was wailing away
(before we'd even laid a hand on her no less) and I looked at the
door to see three pairs of paws between the threshold and the bottom
of the door. Of course as soon as I opened the door, they went
off to the three winds as Dream came charging out looking for cover.
She doesn't seem to mind the ointment as much anymore. I guess
she figures that anything's better than the drops!!
Mary-Michael
|
1971.14 | ! | WEFXEM::COTE | Sing with the clams, knave! | Wed Nov 16 1988 15:34 | 6 |
| Mary-Michael seems to have come upon a good idea... Why not just
squirt the medicine on the cat's front leg?
No self-respecting cat would allow a front leg to be dribbly.
Edd
|
1971.15 | Maybe I could make her a tabby.... | SWAT::COCHRANE | Scattering like light. | Wed Nov 16 1988 16:13 | 7 |
| I can imagine what the front of a white cat would look like after
10 days of orange antibiotic!! THEN I'd have to bathe her, and
she'd *really* love me for that!!! ;-) ;-)
"OWWWW,OWWWWWW,OWWWWWWWWWWWW...." - Dream
Mary-Michael_who_is_amazed_that_such_dainty_little_paws_are_so_darn_strong
|
1971.16 | THIS WILL WORK | SPMFG1::DOWSEYK | | Wed Nov 16 1988 18:17 | 51 |
| My vet showed me how to give pills etc, I found the way to get the
cat to put up with the 'game'. I had to become a 'pro' at this because
I had an old cat, that got very ill. It was a choice of capsules
4 times a day or the end of the line for the poor critter.
I hope I can relate these instructions in an understandable fashion.
1) Give cat lots of loving, playing etc. if kitty likes (and is
able to eat) treats like bonkers you are half way there.
2) Get cat on a high table or other work area (I use the top of
my freezer).
3) Get cat to sit (may need helper), have tail to your left, head
toward your right.
4) Get medication ready in your right hand.
5) Note the shape of the kittys skull. There is a small depression
on each side of the face just below the eyes.
Now put your left hand over the cats head, bring your thumb down
on one side of the face, the forefinger on the other. The thumb
goes in one depression, and the forefinger in the other. You now
can get a firm grip in the head (without hurting kitty).
6) Tip the head back (quickly), as the nose points up the jaw will
fully open, ready for the medication your are holding in your right
hand.
If you are giving pills or capsules they must go on the back of
the tongue. Drop pill as far back as you can, push to rear of mouth
with index finger, KEEP FINGER TO THE FRONT OF THE MOUTH CENTERED
BETWEEN THE CANINE TEETH !!!. Remove finger, let go of head--done!
if you are using a dropper, liquid goes in the back of the mouth,
let head down slowly, rub throat, etc..
7) Now spare no effort in showing kitty how happy you are, give
lots of loving, bonkers, pounce, and pats and hugs. With any luck
your cat will become better at taking medcine than your human kids!
SOME NOTES:
When tipping head back, and popping pill -- be fast, and firm.
When you learned to do this right, you can do it alone with most
cats (and dogs).
You shoulda seen the fight I gave my vet when he told me I HAD TO
LEARN TO DO IT!
|
1971.17 | The Un-Snuffly Dream | SWAT::COCHRANE | Scattering like light. | Thu Nov 17 1988 09:24 | 13 |
| Last night was much better. She took her medicine and didn't make
her usual mad dash for the basement. Later, I went and got her
for cuddles. First we cuddled on the cellar stairs for a while,
then I brought her up and sat her on the couch with me. The poor
thing was shaking she was so scared. So we cuddled some more and
she started purring and curled up on my lap for a while. And then
she jumped down and started walking around! Went into the kitchen,
got a bite to eat, checked things out. So I just started working
around the house and ignoring her. Next thing I know, her little
face is peering down at me from the loft!!!!!!! I think she's getting
better!!!!!!!
Mary-Michael
|
1971.18 | You're a very good new kitty mom! | CUPMK::TRACHMAN | ZhivagoCats, Ltd..The Inn is Full..264-8298 | Thu Nov 17 1988 09:53 | 3 |
| WONDERFUL! good news!!!
E.T.
|
1971.19 | Practice when young | LABC::ALLEN | Equestrian Lady | Fri Nov 18 1988 16:45 | 15 |
| I know this won't help you much now but it will help with the new
young ones. When I got my kid we practiced pilling by using vitamins.
I took those large vitamins and broke them into about 6 small pieces.
I would sit with Sy on his back, on my lap. His head would be on
my knees. Then using left arm, balance cat on knees, then with
left hand pet head then open mouth as described in an earlier note.
The right hand would drop vitamin in. Now years later, I know
that this was one of the best things that I did when Sy was young.
Now whenever I sit with Sy on my lap, upside down, he looks
for his vitamin or for medicine. Liquid was almost impossible to
give the little monster.
Hope this helps someone.
Linda
|
1971.20 | The advice in .16 really works! | POOL::BALLOU | It's not slow, it's careful! | Wed Mar 15 1989 22:10 | 42 |
| Well, I can vouch for the advice in .16 working!
I didn't feel very enthusiastic when the vet (Dr. Brody at the
Countryside Animal Hospital) confirmed that Mickie had tapeworm and
then told me I would have to give her brother Winchester a pill and a
half. But Dr. Brody showed me how by giving Mickie her pill. Her
method was a slight variant on .16:
Position the cat as described in .16. Put the pill between the thumb
and index finger of the right hand. (Never mind the fact that while
you have been doing this, the cat has obligingly squirmed away from
you. Eventually, you will have cat and pill in proper position.) With
the left hand, place the thumb and middle finger in front of the cat's
ears, with the thumb in front of the right ear. (Your palm will be
facing the cat's tail end.) Now, you should be able to lay the cat's
ears flat. This should position your thumb and middle finger over the
depressions mentioned in .16. Tip the head back. When you do this,
their eyes look strange. It just adds to the already considerable
element of "excitement."
With your right hand (you *do* still have the pill between the thumb
and index finger, don't you :-), use the middle finger to open the
mouth. (If you have the head tilted back well, this should be fairly
easy.) Now, here's the real fun. Put/shoot the pill into the cat's
mouth using the index finger as far back as you're willing to go.
Stroke the cat's throat moderately heavily to encourage swallowing.
(The further back you propelled the pill, the easier this is.) A good
sign is the cat salivating and sticking its tongue out quickly (unless
the pill comes out, in which case this is a bad sign :-) Now, do step
7 in .16: show your cat how wonderful (s)he is and give him/her treats
to eat. This seems like a useful step for you and cat both; if the cat
is eating something, you can probably be sure it's not holding the pill
in the cat_magic_place_to_hold_pills_for_twenty_minutes_and_then_spit
place.
Anyway, as I say, I was impressed that I could do this with Winchester.
He made enough fuss about it, leading me on a merry chase. (As an
aside, I think it is better to try to give the cat a pill when it's in
a fairly mellow mood.) I tried again later, when he was resting on his
favorite chair. After I got the pill in him, he did a jumping bean
imitation (description stolen from note 101.0), but he did swallow it.
|
1971.21 | | WITNES::HANNULA | Cat Tails & Bike Wheels Don't Mix | Thu Mar 16 1989 11:52 | 8 |
| Gosh, after reading some of these notes, it makes me sooooo glad
that Portia will open her mouth and stick out her tongue for me
to put the pill on so that she can swallow it.
Elmo is another story. I'm just glad he hasn't had to take medicine
that often. Squirm squirm squirm squirm squirm.
-Nancy
|
1971.22 | Verify that the pill got swallowed before letting go | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Mar 16 1989 13:25 | 16 |
| Just keep a grip on kitty after you think she has swallowed the pill,
and do the same maneuver again (with no pill) and see if the pill is on
her tongue. This is *much* easier to do than to get either of my cats
to hold still in this position while I brush her teeth! - which I have
to start doing again since they are both pretty old and have some gum
disease. I think what they like least is having their heads held and
tipped up that way - they do give you a very dirty look!
You could try burying the pill in something that kitty will eat, but
most cats are too smart for this trick and will leave the pill behind
(or the wrong kitty will eat it, if you have several). My
mother-in-law's dog gets his pills in a gob of peanut butter, which he
really likes (neither of my cats have any interest in it, though), so
when he finds that he has been had, he can't get rid of the pill anyhow
since it is stuck to the peanut butter, so he ends up swallowing it.
|
1971.23 | | CRUISE::NDC | | Thu Mar 16 1989 14:01 | 5 |
| re: .20 I was laughing out loud reading your description! Have
you ever considered doing some writing about your life with your
cats?
Nancy DC
|
1971.24 | "Dream" On, Mom.... | SWAT::COCHRANE | Standing, stretching every nerve | Tue Mar 28 1989 12:39 | 24 |
| Well, this should be interesting. Since my husband and
I have been "drowning" in Dream's sneezes for the past
couple of days (I can't tell you how wonderful it feels
when the cat who is curled up underneath the sheets next
your bare leg makes you the recipient of a big, wet,
sneeze and then wipes it's nose on you as a sign of
affection :-O ) I called the vet this morning to see
if we needed the "monthly" vet visit. We don't, but
my vet said I have to give Dream PILLS this time around.
Oh, how I chuckled to hear those words!!! "PILLS, you say!"
I guffawed, wiping away the tears streaming down my face,
"tell me, are we talking about the same cat? The one that
nearly became an orange tabby after two weeks with Clavadrops?"
My vet insists this is possible. My vet has also had years
of expensive vet-type training. My vet also does not own
this cat. My husband's supportive, spousal response to all
this was, "What's this 'we' S**t?"
Tell me, is is possible to administer the pills while
holding the instructions from .16 in the other hand?
I'll let you know tomorrow....
Mary-Michael
|
1971.25 | | FRAGLE::PELUSO | | Tue Mar 28 1989 14:24 | 8 |
| where do you live? I have gotten quite good @ giving Nippa pills
and would be happy to show you how.
Michele
p.s.
Try coating the pill w/ butter, vasoline, hairball remedy - something
to make it easier on the both of you....
|
1971.26 | | YOSMTE::CORDESBRO_JO | | Tue Mar 28 1989 16:39 | 3 |
| Also, if it is really bad, try one of those pill guns.
Jo
|
1971.27 | The Adventure Begins... | SWAT::COCHRANE | Standing, stretching every nerve | Tue Mar 28 1989 16:48 | 6 |
| I'm going to try and pick up a pill gun at the cat show
this week-end. I live in Plaistow, NH. I'm sure I'll
be searching the carpet for un-swallowed pills most
of this evening....
Mary-Michael
|