When I recently rang my vet as I was concerned about Polly's condition, I was given a number which I assumed to be the on-call vet. It wasn't, it was vets now. The woman on the phone, who may have been a receptionist or nurse, asked me to describe Polly's condition. I did. Then she virtually emotionally blackmailed me into taking Polly in, saying "if you don't, I can't guarantee she will last till the morning." This was around midnight. She then told me it would cost £130 just to walk through the door!! And again told me that the cat may not survive the night, as I was considering waiting till my regular vet opened. Naturally, I felt a duty to Polly to do all I could, so I took her. This involved taxi fares as well as the vet cost.
When I arrived, it took ages for the door to be opened (are they all asleep, thinks me). The vet I saw was very off-hand, sayiing that he thought she'd had a stroke (she may have done). He asked me how old she was; when I told him she was about 19/20, he said, at that age the kindest thing would be to pts!!!
I can't help thinking that if he'd been my regular vet, he would have had her history, and known me and my determined nursing skills. I'll only have a cat pts when I've done everything, but they're determined to go.
He gave her a steroid and painkiller injection (the steroid was my suggestion). I had a bill of about £144 plus £14 taxi fares.
He upset me more than he helped Polly.
My own vet thought she more likely has an ear infection. He thought an adverse reaction to a wormer I'd given her was unlikely considering her weight. He put stroke - probably due to a tumour - low on the list of possibles, but something to keep in mind. And he's now taking good care of her, alongside myself.
He's had lots of experience with various cats I've had and has seen me nurse one back from the brink of death, and nurse others until they'd run out of fight.
If he had seen her that night, it would have saved a great deal of upset. She may still die from this, but at least I'll know everything possible has been done for her.
I hated the cavalier "oh, she's showing signs of a stroke and she's an old cat; let's put her to sleep" attitude of the vets now vet. (Just made a typing error: vets not - probably more appropriate!)