> This one locum jabbed her so hard that she screamed.
That's terrible and is something very few dogs would forget re going to a vet.
Since moving across country years ago now and having to leave my super vet back up East, I'd been through quite a number of vet practices down here before I seem to have found one, with a vet I felt I could actually work with. One vet, on taking my clearly sick hound in to be pts, asked what I was there for (not to have her nails clipped clearly) and then proceeded to tell us how hard it was to get a Basset vein up. At that point I had to leave the office or I swear I'd have hit him. My husband stayed with her but later told me that vet had gone in via her jugular. I was totally shocked, to say nothing of being mega upset. We never went back there. Another vet in another practice, with another hound who was having repeated UTIs and was scanned which showed nothing, refused to x-ray saying scanning was enough. It was only when the Senior Partner finally arrived on the scene, and did x-rays, that secondaries were found in her chest cavity and we had to let her go. I'd gone for a second opinion which they knew about (and was why the Senior Partner appeared) and had phoned my vet up East about what was going on (she said she'd have opened her up by then!!). All pretty disgusting to say the least, and neither vet was a locum/newly qualified either.
I have tried to get the same vet each time now and he loved Frankie/Bassets too, which helped. I have to say the other 3 vets there, who I have used on occasion, are all good too much as I find it hard to understand what their Italian vet is saying

I am going to have to get Teazel checked sooner rather than later as she's now refusing her breakfast more often than eating up. She can lose some weight, but at this rate, will be going rib thin. I have no idea what's going on because it's now some weeks since we lost Franks and she had been eating up ok.