
Hi again Newfienook
Don't you think the out of hours practice has to hire the PDSA facilities with some very extensive and expensive equipment included? Also in my vets, the emergency service (also housed in the PDSA hospital) is staffed by permanent vets and nurses - i.e. professionals committed to full time nightshift and 24 hour weekend work. Not only unsociable hours in the main but often extremely hectic on bank holiday weekends for example.
If hygeine was a problem then by all means your friends should complain, however it could easily have been an oversight to leave a mop and bucket out in the waiting area when one or more critical emergencies was being attended to in the treatment and surgical areas .....
As to the issue of blood tests, I mentioned earlier that these can be quickly out of date - even within a matter of hours - however had the dog's owner stipulated these should not be carried out they would not have been. Treatment is not forced upon the clients. Presumably as the dog's owners were also already very used to this poor old lad having difficulties, they themselves felt his condition sufficiently serious enough to seek emergency attention rather than take the chance of him muddling through the weekend until their usual practice was open - that in itself shows, IMO, that they were more concerned than usual so why criticise a vet who doesn't know the animal from Adam for trying to quickly establish a diagnosis

One of mine spent last Easter weekend in the care of a similar place (and four visits, meds, nursing care and one overnight stay cost a hang of a lot more than the figure you've mentioned

) and I couldn't believe each time we went there how busy the staff were and how many very seriously ill animals came through the doors :( As with any job they need to prioritise.
My regular vet one day kept me waiting for almost an hour in a waiting room which looked like a bomb had hit it - just before I arrived a BM had been brought in almost dead having gone through the glass of a large window. Thankfully they saved the dog but it was all hands on deck and I'm sure (quite rightly) the appearance of the waiting room was the least of their concerns at the time.
If your friends still believe they have due cause for complaint in any form, then I would recommend they put it in writing a.s.a.p. to the practice manager of the EV and also their own vet.
regards, Teri