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    The Revenge of the Veterinarian: Pills for Your Cat

    By Dr. Marty Becker, vetstreet.com

    In the spirit of the great shockumentaries that are late-night cable favorites, I am going to expose veterinary medicine's heinous funny bone with a joke we call "Give your cat this medicine at home."

    It starts out with a cat lover putting off the trip to the veterinarian with a sick cat in order to avoid the following chain of events: Cat hides under the couch; human attempts to extricate the cat and stuff him into a carrier; cat claws shred human flesh like a feline Freddy Krueger; cat finally womanhandled (man of the house nowhere to be found, so manhandled not a possibility) into the carrier. At this point, the pet owner makes a quick drive to the veterinary hospital, often while being serenaded with the unhappy sounds of a cat plotting revenge.

    Related: Best Ways to Give a Cat a Pill

    And now we find ourselves in the exam room. Let the show begin!

    Out explodes the cat, hissing and raking the air with claws extended. Approximately 325 pounds of veterinarian plus technician catch the cat and put on a show called Contortionist Cat Examination. So far, so bad. Everyone - except the cat - is now covered in cat fur. Some are sneezing. Many are bleeding. All are scared.

    But now it's the vet's turn to get even by saying to Mrs. Client (with a completely straight face), "Socks has an infection that will require treatment at home for the next two weeks. Give Socks one of these tiny pills twice daily." In the eyes of the cat and the owner, of course, the tiny pills look to be the size of tennis balls.

    As we watch the rumbling box and dazed owner head toward the car, we can well imagine the World Feline Wrestling Federation match that will take place once they are home. Twice a day, for two weeks. The very thought makes us smile as we clean up the fur and patch up our wounds.

    Once Mrs. Trepidation (formerly Mrs. Frustrated Kitty Client) opens the cat carrier at home, a streak of furry flash-lightning can be seen dashing under the same couch, where this odyssey began. When Mrs. Trepidation's husband and children come home, she announces sweetly and innocently: "We need to give Socks a little medicine. Would you mind helping Mommy?"

    Related: 5 Things Every Owner Needs to Know About Giving Cats Pills

    If they've been through this before, they respond with their own dash for cover. If they are rookies, they may agree to help, having no idea what's about to happen.

    Soothing words and food lures are ignored by the cat. A quick grab finally extricates him from under the couch. With pills and fluffy towels out and doors closed, one set of hands pries open the cat's mouth and the bell rings for round one. Socks comes out swinging with a classic "bite or flight" response. The family counterpunches by throwing in the towel, literally, over and around the cat to make a cat burrito that can be stuffed with medicine.

    Finally, the pill goes down, and everyone gives a big sigh of relief. Just then, the cat spits out the pill and, in a flash, is back under the couch. The family takes round two in stride as they put on the leather gloves. Not intimidated by a 575-pound opponent (Mom, Dad, couple of kids), the cat is ready to explore the floor, walls and - if need be - ceiling of the living room.

    See Also: Why Does My Cat... Cough?

    Meanwhile, back at the vet's office, the veterinary team is chuckling. "Think of all the suckers we sent home to try to medicate their cats today!" Truth be known, it's difficult even for veterinarians to give medications to some cats. So next time you visit the vet and hear, "Give these little pills to kitty," turn the tables by saying: "No, I think I'll hospitalize her so you can make sure it gets done. As a matter of fact, would you show me the correct way to give a cat a pill, right now?"

    It's payback time!

    Postscript: No, your veterinarian really doesn't seek revenge through your cat. Getting medicine into your cat is very important to us, and we want to help you do it. Here are some tips.

    See More on vetstreet.com:
    * Top 10 Kitten Names
    * 6 Past Westminster 'Best in Show' Winners - Where Are They Now?
    * 3 Cardinal Sins Broken as TV Anchor Gets Attacked By Dog on Air

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    Source of Original Article: The Revenge of the Veterinarian: Pills for Your Cat


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    7 comments

    • Angels  •  3 months ago
      Hahahahahaha. Totally reminds me of when I had to give my boyfriend's cat Luna pills.... He couldn't do it because he was "afraid of hurting her" yeah... right.... I got the scars to prove that it wasn't her getting hurt
    • Need2Know  •  3 months ago
      ROFL! Me and my family laughed so hard. This is exactly what we go through! Thanks!
    • babeesmom  •  Conroe, Texas  •  3 months ago
      Last summer BabeeCat (age 20 and blind) was constipated. So off we went to the vet. He said he needed to give her an enema (had 2 of those) and I could pick her up later in the day. He gave me pills to help her keep regular and we went home. After she had a bath (3rd one in her 20 yrs), we tried to give her the pill...thought it went down, til I realised she had spit it at my neck..In one week, I think we got 3 pills to stay down. With a change in her diet, no more constipation or enemas. And, no more pills!
      • kimb 3 months ago
        neck. LOL
    • not it  •  Newburgh, New York  •  3 months ago
      ummm just give them the pills in those pill pocket things
      • kimb 3 months ago
        ummm do you have a cat you ever had to pill? And BTW, after the vet and medication and first aid, I can't afford the pill pockets I invented! Just playing with you "Not". ^..^
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Bellflower, California  •  3 months ago
      Haha! Cute! My vet gives shots though. Very funny though.
    • zodiac  •  3 months ago
      WOW vets are #$%$ They could have given the cat one shot in the office and been done with it. But oh no they want the owners to suffer.
      • degausser 3 months ago
        I'm pretty sure this was meant to be a joke....not an admission of vet-owner cruelty or something. I also don't think they can treat an infection with "one shot in the office". Antibiotics are typically taken for 1 or 2 weeks, for humans and pets.
    • Cecil  •  Huntsville, Texas  •  3 months ago
      I have to give my cat a pill every day for her thyroid. I use pillpockets or hide the pill in tuna or chicken. She eats it up quick and has no idea she took the pill. It really saves me the trouble and stress.

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