Saturday, 28 December 2013

Work Experience: What I've Been Up To So Far

Valley Vets

I've been going to Valley Vets for 5 years (since I was 12 years old). Of course at this age I wasn't able to do much, other than watch operations and clean up. However, I am now able to help look after the animals that come in from the RSPCA and I often help feed and clean them. I still help to clean the examination table and mop the floors, but I feel that I am now trusted more and I am allowed to be a little bit more hands on.

Unfortunately I have no free periods on my college timetable where I could go to the vet's, so I am restricted to after school consults. This also restricts me to Wednesday's, which tend to be very quiet. However I really enjoy getting the chance to ask the vet questions, to help out with the RSPCA animals and to meet the regular patients when I'm there. 

Park Vets

Unfortunately I have been unable to go to Park Vets during the day, due to insurance. However I was able to go and have a look around the facilities during the evening.

When I was there I was able to see different equipment that I hadn't been able to see in Valley Vets. I was able to have a look at the endoscopes, the X-Ray machines, a sterile operating theatre and a large animal drug dispensary.

Whilst there I met a cat that had jumped out of a window and had lost the use of his back legs. It was upsetting to hear, that if he wasn't able to reuse his legs within a number of weeks, he would have to be euthanised. This would be because it would be unfair on him to be kept alive, as he wouldn't be able to look after himself.

Fletcher's Farm

I've been going to Fletcher's Dairy Farm since July 2013. When I started at the farm I'd had no experience with large animals at all. However now I'm often thrown at the deep end. For example, today I was left to clean out the parlour and make sure everything was in order for the afternoon milking. I've been left alone in the parlour a number of times and know how to feed the cows and clean, dip and put the clusters onto the cows. Also I am now much more confident around the cows and find myself pushing them around if need be. 

The calf moved just as I took the photo, hence the blurriness.
If I don't understand anything, Michael, Helen, John and Laura (who look after me) have said, I ask and they are more than willing to describe in detail what something is or what something does. In fact they are often more grateful for me to ask, rather than nodding and hoping they don't find out that I'm unsure about what something is.

My favourite part about the farm: 
The calves. I was lucky enough to see a calf being born on 30th November 2013. That date will be imprinted into my brain. I had waited since July to see a cow give birth and it was definitely worth the wait. The birth was not simple because the calf’s head kept moving back towards its stomach. Michael was going to tie a piece of cord to the jaw of the calf so that he could manipulate the head, to between its front two legs, more easily. At the time everything was happening so quickly, but the whole birth probably took half an hour. Seeing a more difficult birth work out perfectly was something that has definitely enthused my dreams of becoming a vet. 


Attaching a block so that the infected hoof is able to heal.
The part of the farm that can be difficult:
When I drive up to the yard and see a dead cow or dead calf, I find that the most difficult. When I first saw a dead cow, I didn't know how to react. I just stared and wouldn't get too close to the body. However, I would like to think that I have become more accepting towards the idea of animals dying. This is not to say that I feel nothing when I see a dead animal, but more that I don't feel like crying or running away. I feel that I am now more able to contain my emotions. 


Heath Vets

During my week of work experience in Year 11, I was offered a place in Heath Vets. Heath Vets is very different to Valley Vets as it is bigger and there are more staff employed there. During the week, I mostly shadowed a relatively newly qualified vet. She was brilliant with the owners and the animals. 

Before going to Heath Vets I wasn't as clear as to how well your communication skills have to be. However after seeing a Dachshund that was the weight of two Dachshunds, I realise that as a vet, your role is to educate, as well as to care for animals. Some people take a vet's advice on board straight away, whereas some don't listen at all. With some owner's it's important to tell them exactly how it is, but with some you have to be very careful with how you phrase the information. 

During work experience I also realised that I can stay calm in very stressful situations. The vet had performed a spay, on a black lab, first thing in the morning and everything went well. However, just as we were sending her home we realised that blood had started to pour out of the stitched up area whenever she moved. This was definitely abnormal and nothing I'd seen before. The nurse had to speak to the owners and tell them that their dog had to be kept in for extra observation, while also making sure that they weren't worried about her. While this was happening the vet was doing ultrasounds to see if there were any pockets of fluids, suggesting any abnormal bleeding. To cut a long story short, we ended up opening her up as the bleeding wouldn't stop. (The operating theatre had what, at the time, seemed like puddles of blood everywhere, which didn't help the stress levels of the vet). At first the vet thought that the bleeding was from a nick in the skin but as time went on, she assumed it was the capillaries in the fat. The vet had the nurse call the senior partner of the practice to have a look, because she was becoming more stressed by the second. It turns out that the dog was actually fine and after an extra stitch and some fluids, over night, she was ready to go home. 

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