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Title: | Meower Power is Valuing Differences |
Notice: | FELINE_V1 is moving 1/11/94 5pm PST to MISERY |
Moderator: | MISERY::VANZUYLEN_RO |
|
Created: | Sun Feb 09 1986 |
Last Modified: | Tue Jan 11 1994 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 5089 |
Total number of notes: | 60366 |
2428.0. "HEY!! This Vet does HOUSECALLS!!" by CPDW::MCDONOUGH (I'm a friend of THUNDER) Wed May 03 1989 11:21
The following is reprinted without pwrmission from a recent issue of
the Worcester Mass daily Telegram...
"Katmobile" rides to felines' rescue...
When the telephone rings in Dr. Katherin Reiner's late-model, grey
Subaru, more often than not it's another case of the "Katmobile" to the
rescue!.
Reiner is a veterinarian.
She specializes in cats. And she makes house-calls!
With a weighing scale and several medical bags stuffed in the back
seat of her car, Reiner is only a telephone call away--on the
"fe-line," of course--from a pet-owner's cat-tastrophe.
Based out of her home at 3 Gould Road in Lexington, the 31-year-old
graduate of Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine in Grafton
has taken her practice on the road.
Her territory covers a dozen or so communities in the
Bedford-Concord-Lexington area, including Maynard, acton and Stow.
Having a veterinarian make house calls is getting "a little more
popular these days," Reiner said as she traveled Route 62 to Concord
and the Peter Spring Road home of Andrea Boudreau and her eight cats,
two of whom were scheduled for examinations.
"I started the housecall practice in my "Katmobile" a little over a
year ago and it's really growing nicely," she said. "The population is
increasing and the office overhead is increasing, so what you are
seeing is an old-fashioned medical idea--the housecall--coming back."
The housecall is a financially sound alternative to opening a clinic,
especially for a veterinarian just starting in the practice, said
Reiner. "The cost of opening an animal hospital is astronomical."
A spokeswoman for the Grafton-based Massachusetts Veterinary Medical
Association said there are relatively few veterinarians who specialize
in one type of small animal. Most are general practicioners, she said.
There are also very few veterinarians who provide mobile service, she
added.
"It's very expensive to start a practice," she said. "However, most
veterinarians will try to establish their own clinics within five years
of starting practice."
Born and raised in Lexington, Reiner graduated from Lexington High
School and received her undergraduate degree in 1980 from U.N.H.. She
received her graduate degree in veterinary medicine in 1984 from Tufts.
Her specialty is cats, "and that, too, is becoming a little more
popular." She is a member of the Feline Practicioners Association, a
national association of veterinarians who specialize in treating cats.
Reiner said the association boasts of a membership of around 70, "but
it's growing daily."
According to Reiner, America's love affair with the cat is in full
bloom.
"Cats are now the #1 pet; they've surpassed dogs in popularity." she
said.
"They're more suitable to people's lifestyles these days. You have
situations where two adults in the family are working or out of the
house a lot. There's nobody there to walk a dog or to housetrain a
puppy. Cats are a lot easier to take care of.
They're a good house pet when there's not going to be people home for
long periods of time during the day."
Reiner chose to specialize in felines "after sitting around deciding
that I hated what I was doing--basically a small-animal practice of
cats, dogs, and exotics(birds). I wasn't happy. I knew I wanted to work
for myself, and I knew I couldn't afford to in a traditional style."
She said she made a list of the things she enhjoyed "and realized
that I enjoyed working with cats. And whe I was in school, I seemed to
gravitate toward cases that involved cats. When I was working in the
hospital, it made me happier when I was working with cats."
Reiner said she was "born wanting to be a veterinarian."
Reiner worked part time while in high school for the Audubon Society
in Lincoln. "I just couldn't come up with anything else I ever wanted
to do as much as be a veterinarian."
Affiliated with two animal hospitals---"Cat Doctor" in Bedford and
"Animal Emergency Care" in Acton---Reiner can have her patients treated
in either location should they require more care than can be given at
home. Mostly, the home visits concern routine veterinary matters,
including vaccinations and leukemia testing.
She said her fees--$25.00 for the housecall and $15.00 for an
examination---are "not outrageously expensive. People are paying for
the convenience of not having to travel to a veterinarian's office."
While Reiner has found that "generally it's easier to treat cats in
surroundings that are familiar to them," she has found herself in some
unusual positions in providing treatment. "I had to crawl under a sink
once to innoculate a cat. And another time I had a cat trapped in a
bathroom and kinda wedged behind a toilet and couldn't get it out. I
gave it it's shot right there."
"I've even put cats to sleep in their owner's homes," she said. "I
think people find that a lot more comforting than dropping them off
some place to have them put to sleep."
"Mrs. Brodeur, who said she collects stray cats like a flame
attracting moths, finds the "Katmobile" service a difficult attraction
to pass up.
"I've got two children---a daughter, 4, and a son, 9 months, three
birds and eight cats," Mrs Brodeur said. "I don't know when I'd find
time to get all the cats over to the vets."
"This is perfect"---only it came out sounding "PURRRRfect..."
JM
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2428.1 | My vet has always done housecalls--it's great! | JULIET::APODACA_KI | In the Palace of my Shame... | Wed May 03 1989 13:49 | 27 |
| My vet does housecalls too...in fact, the name of his "clinic" is
indeed HOUSECALLS. I believe he will work on both cats and dogs,
is very prompt and available, and subscribes to the theory that
pets are more comfortable to be treated in their own homes. They
are not plucked out of a nice safe surrounding into the new and
strange vet office, poked and prodded and then have to be transported
back home where by then, they are all stressed out. Instead, at
home, they are already on safe ground and less stress is caused.
My cats have been spayed by Dr. Thies and then put in the bathroom
where it's quiet as they come out of anesthesa (boy, do they look
stoned for a while). His motorcoach has pretty much everything
he needs to do most forms of surgery and treatment and in general,
I have found him to be LESS expensive, in most cases, than taking
my animals to a clinic (altho bones has upcoming surgery that would
be better done where he can have supervision, being an older cat).
His area is pretty extensive throughout the San Jose area (it includes
most of the South Bay--which for you not of this area is all those
cities down at the south end of the San Francisco Bay). I am really
happy with him--it beats loading the cats up to take them in. He
comes to me (and even on Saturdays!).
So anyway I am not surprised other vets are doing this nowdays.
There's definately the need and market for it.
---kim
|
2428.2 | | FRAGLE::PELUSO | | Wed May 03 1989 14:11 | 16 |
|
Kim-
your kitties were spayed in your home?
This type of vet sounds great. I have a friend in Maynard whose
cats have a vet who makes house calls. I enquired about the cost
for him to travel to my house, out of his way - in a big way, and
therefore it would be too expensive. ANything to make the experience
easier on Nippa is my main goal -and my current vet does a great job, but
I have to draw the line somewwhere (in regards to $$), however
this house call thing seems like the way to go... I hope someone
in my area will pick up on this type of buisness!
Michele
|
2428.3 | Fremont Vet is the greatest | YOSMTE::CORDESBRO_JO | | Wed May 03 1989 14:36 | 7 |
| Dr. Thies will not come to Morgan Hill.
:^(
So I drive an hour to Fremont instead.
Jo
|
2428.4 | my vet is better than your vet..neener, neeneer.. ;) | JULIET::APODACA_KI | In the Palace of my Shame... | Wed May 03 1989 19:30 | 12 |
| Re: 3 (Jo, that's too bad cause with all your cats it'd save you
a trip!)
true, his area is somewhat limited...he won't go to fremont either.
but for san jose, santa clara, cambell, los gatos, etc...good deal.
Re: 2
well, she was spayed inside the motor coach, then brought IN the
home to recup. i don't think he wants to gross us out too much,
plus we don't have the sugery table yet. ;)
|
2428.5 | | FRAGLE::PELUSO | | Thu May 04 1989 09:47 | 5 |
|
Kim-
I was hoping you'd say something like that.....but I _had_ to ask
;^)
|
2428.6 | on the kitchen table! argh. | GLINKA::GREENE | Cat Lady | Thu May 04 1989 10:26 | 12 |
| To gross you out... ;-)
One of my friends uses a vet who makes housecalls, and about
a month ago, he neutered two of her males on her kitchen
table. (so you won't have to ask, he took the bits with
him when he left.)
I've assisted the vet with C-sections, etc., but always in the
safety of the hospital -- scared to death that I'd turn the valve
the wrong way on the oxygen or something terrible.
Pennie
|
2428.7 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Jan 31 1990 10:50 | 4 |
| Well, does anyone have any experience with Dr. Reiner? We met her the other
day, and were wondering if we should switch our cat care to her.
/john
|
2428.8 | | EDSAIC::HERTZ | Ron Hertz dtn 249-1396 | Mon Feb 19 1990 12:10 | 2 |
| We (and a number of our friends) have been very pleased
with Dr. Reiner.
|