tattoo wrote:we got the report from the vet. very hard to read because it is very scribbled. but she did bleed out. her air sac filled with blood and he tried cpr with no sucess.
No one will know if he or if his assistant handled the bird correctly or not because he took the bird to another room to preform the procedure. He admitted he could of caused the death. and after the fact said it is always risky.
doesn't the vet have an obligation (if nothing more to cover his butt) to let someone know that this coud be risky. I understand it was an accident but accidents still have someone liable. I know he didn't it on purpose.. but he still did it and freak or not, the bird died. '
if at my company we make a mistake, we still take responsibity and make the customer whole.
i cant agree that the vet can just blow this off as a opps, i guess i could of done this ... and oh if you want me to still get the blood tested the you wil have to pay for that?
this just does not sit well with me this was NOT nervous bird.. very calm and gentle
I doubt the vet was blowing it off, he's likely very upset over the whole incident as he knows he's responsible for the death of the bird, even though it was not his fault (if that makes sense?). There is always risk with medical procedures which leads me to say, yes, I think maybe he should have advised of the risks of the procedure because, although not common, there are cases (as mentioned perviously) of birds dying from the procedure. I still don't think he is obligated to pay anything towards the cost of the bird though.
Even calm birds can freak out in a different environment and when being restrained for a jugular blood sample. My birds are prime examples, I can do anything with them and they are very gentle, but if I restrain them to take blood all hell breaks loose.
I'm surprised they didn't provide a typed report? That would have been the more professional approach so you didn't have to interpret vet handwriting (which is generally non-readable in most countries

).
How is your friend doing? Such a tragic, horrible experience for her
A quick note on blood sampling from toenails: a contaminated blood sample is something to be concerned about. If there is even a teeny drop of urates contaminating the blood then that value will be elevated on the biochemistry panel and lead to a route of diagnosing kidney failure in a bird that is healthy. That's just one example...
I personally think it is mean as it is more painful for the bird and you never get enough blood. Jugular sampling is usually my last resort or reserved for birds under 30g and generally I anaesthetise them to reduce the stress and to reduce wriggling. Conscious jugular samples are easier on larger birds (usually cockatiel size and over). I usually use the medial metatarsal vein on the inside of the leg, its super easy, its clean, you get sufficient blood to run all the tests you require, the bird doesn't go home with a sore foot as a tiny little needle prick in the leg is pretty harmless (obviously if done by someone with experience - it is actually challenging getting blood from bird veins as the veins are so fragile and a lot smaller than what most small animal vets are used to dealing with, so this just re-emphasises the need to go to an experienced avian vet). The ulna vein in the wing is my next choice if the legs are too cold and the blood isn't flowing (this happens lots, especially in NZ

). The ulna vein is more fragile and tends to blow more easily though so more skill required.
You'll find many avian veterinarians are moving away from using toenail clips to collect blood samples. Avian medicine is a reasonably new field, but not that new, at least 20 years old now and we have a lot of knowledge and do lots of cool things that are comparable to what small animal veterinarians can do. Diagnostics are improving all the time, as are diagnostic sampling methods...anywho, I could blah about this topic for hours so I'll stop
But yes, I agree with Mona - find a good avian vet BEFORE you have an emergency. Not that this little bird in the discussion was brought to the vet for an emergency, however, the vets might not have been that experienced with birds? The association of avian veterinarians webpage (aav.org) has a listing of avian veterinarians so I'd recommend hoping onto that site to search your area and find yourselves a bird vet that is nearby if you don't already have one

. The AAV also has links to the Australasian group of Avian Vets (AAVAC) as well as the European group.
Right, enough from me, I'm sure you're all sick of reading this by now

. I'm going to go and sleep off some jetlag!! Boston is a pretty cool city!!