The view from the front. |
Where I spent the majority of my time in the shelter |
The surgery room where students do dog and cat spays/neuters during the morning. It has viewing windows for the public and often there were children watching us doing surgery through the windows. |
My Bedroom. The student bedrooms are within the shelter, situated above the medical center |
The student lounge |
View of the side and back of the shelter. Complete with rose garden and pet cemetery/memorials. |
Entrance to the pet cemetery. |
One of several pet memorials behind the shelter. |
Walking trail behind the shelter for walking dogs that are housed in the shelter. Volunteers come in daily to walk each dog. |
One of the cat rooms in the shelter where potential adopters can go in and meet the cats. All of the rooms are themed. This one is skiing themed I think. |
Another cat room. |
Another cat room. I thought these rooms were really great! |
Two of the four puppies that we worked with as group to get them used to being on a leash. |
Me and another student performing surgery one morning. |
Now for a little bit about some of my patients. Each student is assigned patients that they care for with the aid of one of the doctors. Each morning we would do treatments, clean kennels, walk dogs, and look for improvement. Then, in morning rounds we would inform everyone about how our patients were doing and decide what she be done for them that day. Sometimes we would get to participate in surgeries or other treatments that our patients needed during the day. Other times we were busy doing other things and would be updated during evening rounds about what happened to our patients during the day. Then we would do evening treatments. We were encouraged to take our patients upstairs to the student quarters and we did! It was like having several pets for 3 weeks. When they got well enough to be adopted or fostered they would be moved out of the medical center.
Meet Jack, a Shih tzu with one eye, bad teeth, a shoulder mass, and bladder stones. We did surgery on him to remove a stone that was lodged in his urethra. Later he got a dental cleaning and I got to remove the mass from his shoulder. I feel really lucky that I was able to remove his mass. It was pretty cool! He was a very nice little dog.
Jack hanging out in the student lounge. You can kind of make out his mass on his left shoulder. |
Me and Jack after his mass removal |
He got moved out of the medical center the last day I was at OHS. I hope he finds an awesome family! |
Rory Joe, the cutest kitten ever! While he wasn't my patient, he found his way into most of the students hearts including mine. He had a rectal prolapse problem which was treated surgically and seems to have worked. Rory actually was adopted by one of the students on the rotation. :)
A few more cuties... The orange kitten is Rockey, he had a fracture of his femoral head so the removed it doing a procedure called an FHO. He took it like a champ and loved being petted and fed. The puppy was one of 6 adorable puppies that we spayed/neutered and I would go hang out with them until one by one they all got adopted.
There were many other patients that I had and I learned a lot from each of them. I got really good at getting dogs and cats to take their pills (not as easy as it sounds). Overall, my experience was awesome and I really did learn a lot and I gained confidence while at OHS. I really liked the group of students I was on my rotation with and thought that we all worked together well. I'm looking forward to being able to go back in January for 2 weeks and meet more cute animals!
The last day at OHS. Me, Katelyn, and Giovanna |
1 comment:
Awesome stuff Alexa. You are a natural and right in your element. So cool.
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