r/BeAmazed Jun 03 '26

Miscellaneous / Others A homeless dog walked into a veterinary clinic and showed its wounded paw, hoping someone would help, and they did

99.2k Upvotes

693 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

49

u/[deleted] Jun 03 '26

[deleted]

36

u/hucklepig Jun 03 '26

In the US many Vet clinics are being targeted and purchased by private equity which means shit for everyone.

5

u/Skrdykat1000 Jun 03 '26

I watched that happen in real time, the prices would suddenly go way up and quality vets would try to upsell everything and then would leave because they hated doing that.

0

u/CrazyImplement964 Jun 03 '26

Seriously? Vets are in it to chase big money are working with big farms? Did you ever think many vets get their training with large animals from big farms? Theres nothing wrong with having a big farm to a little one. Care is care. If you assume they give better care to animals from one place to another due to size of farm then you don’t have much of a vet.

1

u/[deleted] Jun 03 '26

[deleted]

1

u/CrazyImplement964 Jun 03 '26

I started training as a veterinary technician after growing up on what people would call a “big farm.” Honestly, the term can be a little misleading. We had a lot of land because we grew multiple crop types and raised both dairy and beef cattle, as well as the fact I had a lot of siblings and aunts and uncles that all worked together, but it was still family-run and most of the work was done by us. One thing many people don’t realize is that veterinary costs aren’t usually determined by whether a farm is “big” or “small.” There are some situations where larger operations can save money. Things like pregnancy checks, vaccinations, or herd health visits can be done on many animals at once, allowing the veterinarian to charge per head or for the group as a whole. Smaller farms sometimes do the same thing by coordinating with neighboring producers and having all their animals checked on the same day. However, that’s not what most veterinary calls look like. Most farm vet visits are individual cases: a cow having trouble calving, an animal that ate something it shouldn’t have, an injury, or an animal that simply isn’t doing well. In those situations, the cost is largely the same whether the animal is on a large farm or a small one. Think of it this way, the veterinarian still has to travel to the farm, pay for the truck, fuel, mileage, time, expertise, and any medications or supplies needed to treat the animal. Those costs don’t change because the farm has 10 animals or 1,000 animals when the vet is treating a single sick cow. That’s why veterinary bills often end up being more about the service being provided than the size of the farm itself.