Toa Payoh Vets Clinical
Research
Making veterinary surgery alive
to a veterinary student studying in Australia
using real case studies and pictures |
A Canine Coup
D'etat
Dr Sing Kong Yuen,
BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVS
First written: Sep 19, 2009 |
"Why did you go to the SPCA
at 2 pm to abort the scheduled euthanasia of this old dog?" I
asked the couple who requested me to euthanase the dog as it was
in poor health. One lethal injection and the vet gets his
payment for his services.
"It was mum who sent the dog to the SPCA," the wife said. "She
is very old and is unable to take care of the dog for my brother
who is in hospital now."
This case reminded me of the various coup d'etat in Thailand. A
coup is the sudden unconstitutional removal of a legitimate
government. In this case, the legitimate owner is in hospital.
If his faithful companion who sticks to him through thick and
thin is put to sleep suddenly, there will be reactions.
I asked the couple to ask the two pre-teen children to wait
outside the examination room and advised: "The owner will find
that the veterinary certificate of euthanasia with the cause
that the dog is in poor health or cancer is incredulous. There
will be high emotions and possibly bodily harm to family
members. High emotions may lead to mental instability and
murders. Possibly your mother may be murdered in a heat of
quarrel and high tension emotions over the unauthorised
euthanasia of the son's dog!"
The couple was silent for a while. They had not anticipated such
extreme possibilities.
"You know the owner's temperament well," I said. I could also
foresee litigation and even my demise by attackers unknown, due
to acts of vengeance. My retribution for euthanasia of an old
dog in a canine coup d'etat. This scenario sounds hilarious to
you readers, but murders of passion do occur in any society.
Such
cases must be handled carefully by the vet. Written permission
must be obtained from the real owner. Analyse what is the
problem. The main problem seems to me that the mum could not
care for the dog. The solution was for me to board it at minimal
cost. The couple took the dog home after 7 days.
I did not follow up
such cases since I don't have the funds to help out the owner. A
"PDSA" institution like that in the UK for dog owners unable to
pay private vet fees will be good for such cases but nobody in
Singapore has got one started.
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