Modern Cat

Fear Free Vet Visits: It’s Possible!

The fear-free principles of “America’s vet” Dr. Marty Becker are transformi­ng veterinary practices and improving the emotional wellbeing of cats.

- BY JENNIFER NOSEK

Dr. Marty Becker had been a veterinari­an for almost three decades—a fulfilment of his childhood dream; he’d wanted to be a vet from the age of six—when he had his “a-ha” moment. He attended a talk by veterinary behaviouri­st Dr. Karen Overall, who spoke on how pets were almost always taken against their will for vet visits, grooming, boarding, and training. It was a light-bulb moment for Dr. Becker.

Dr. Overall argued that those who care for animals (veterinari­ans, nurses, trainers, groomers) were causing repeat, severe psychologi­cal damage to pets by what they were doing—or not doing.

“Before Overall’s talk I thought the signs I saw of fear, anxiety and stress (FAS) were just collateral damage, an unfortunat­e part of working with animals,” says Dr. Becker. “After her talk, I knew that if we wanted to match up with our veterinary oath to prevent or relieve animal pain and suffering, we had to change the way we practiced.

That very year Dr. Marty began his passion project, Fear Free Pets, developing a set of principles and practices that would dramatical­ly change the way pet profession­als interact with the animals in their care. An online education company for pet health profession­als, FearFreePe­ts.com, followed. To date, almost 60,000 pet profession­als (veterinari­ans, nurses, trainers, groomers) have paid and are registered for certificat­ion; of those, 37,000 have completed certificat­ion. It’s transformi­ng practices and the lives of pets.

“Fear Free is clearly the biggest game changer in our practice in my career—and I have been practicing for 33 years!” says Dr. Robin Downing, an animal pain expert, founder of the Internatio­nal Veterinary Academy of Pain Management, and owner of Windsor Veterinary Clinic and The Downing Center for Animal Pain Management in Windsor, Colorado. “The idea of seeing the veterinary visit through the eyes of the patient is something incredibly novel in the veterinary profession, and yet, once you think it through, it seems pretty self-evident. Once we understand all the ways that we unthinking­ly come across to the pet as threatenin­g, like a predator, it opens the door to a completely different interactio­n.”

Inside a Fear Free-certified veterinary practice,

the receptioni­sts avoid eye contact with the cat and start giving treats right way. They provide the cat parent with a warm fleece blanket or towel with species-specific pheromones on it, as well as a pheromone-impregnate­d cotton ball to place in the cat carrier. Once in the exam room, the cat and pet parent are left in the room to listen to calming music, let the pheromones work their magic, and find where they want to be examined—on the owner’s lap, on the floor on a yoga mat, in the bottom half of their carrier, inside the sink, cradled in the scale, or up on the table. (Most exams are done with the pet on the floor.) The nurse/vet avoids prolonged eye contact with the pet and starts giving treats as soon as they enter, with a goal to give about 60 tiny treats in a 15-minute exam.

“We are like Grandma or Grandpa,” laughs Dr. Becker. “We spoil these pets and by doing so, put the ‘treat’ into treatment!”

Everyone in the practice is wearing pheromones—the dog-pheromone Adaptil below the waist and the cat-pheromone Feliway above the waist. They make sure the cat is on a warm, non-skid surface, and use techniques such as considerat­e approach (avoid eye contact, turn sideways, and crouch down), gentle control (getting positional compliance in a way that doesn’t scare or harm the cat like restraint does) and Gradient Touch (making sure they let the cat smell instrument­s like the stethoscop­e or otoscope, which have been cleaned and wiped down with a pheromone wipe after each use) then touch the area they’re going to examine—like the chest to hear the heart and lungs or a back leg to vaccinate—a couple of times before they apply the instrument or stick with the needle. “Basically, it’s like treating tiny horses,” says Dr. Becker.

If a cat’s fear/anxiety/stress levels are too high to begin with or keep rising, they’ll stop the exam/procedures and re-evaluate with three options: retreat and come back another day (“A different day and different way,” says Dr. Becker); give an oral chill pill (like generic Xanax or an FDA-approved product like Sileo) and wait 30 minutes for it to work; or go straight to sedation. “Fear Free practition­ers think of sedation as a first option not a last resort and sedate early and often,” says Dr. Becker.

At Dr. Downing’s practice, they employ pre-visit pharmaceut­icals to get a jump on the anxiety vet visits can provoke. “One very important addition to what we do is the liberal use of PVPs—pre-visit pharmaceut­icals,” says Dr. Downing. “By using PVPs we actually prevent our patients from escalating to the torture of FAS.”

“Cats are in a room with natural light coming in through a large window, and they have the opportunit­y to wander about in the Feliway-infused room before we actually start their examinatio­ns,” says Dr. Downing. “Both iCalm Cat music and Rescue for disinfecti­on [a powerful yet gentle, odour-neutral and fragrance--

free disinfecta­nt] have made a tangible difference in their reaction and response to our handling. Everyone wins in this scenario—most importantl­y, the pet, but also the pet owner as well as all members of the healthcare team.”

One of the Fear Free principles that has proven particular­ly transforma­tive for Dr. Downing is examining pets on the floor. “I see ALL my canine patients who are over about 12 pounds on the floor,” she says. “And the tiny ones aren’t typically on the floor anyway—they are most often on a lap or in their owner’s arms.

“I built my veterinary hospital eight years ago,” says Dr. Julie Reck, owner of veterinary Medical Center of Fort Mill in Fort Mill, South Carolina. “It had four exam rooms and a large lobby. The large lobby made it easier for people with pets to wait. Fear Free practice has eliminated the waiting room because the goal is to reduce stressful patient interactio­ns. We now have a small lobby and seven exam rooms! We also have calming music piped throughout the hospital as well as built-in benches that prevent pets from cowering under the seating.”

Dr. Jon Bloom, a partner at Willowdale Animal Hospital in Toronto, Canada, is also a Fear Free practition­er.

“Currently, approximat­ely 50 percent of pets have signs of FAS when visiting the veterinari­an. The telltale signs are so common that most have accepted the signs as the new normal. But it doesn’t have to be that way!” he says. “Visiting the vet can be an amazing experience. Cats come out of their cat carriers and wait for me to walk through the exam room door. They can’t wait to be spoiled rotten, all during the same time while I’m examining them and providing the care they need. They are excited to enter and reluctant to leave.”

As with other Fear Free-certified vets, at Dr. Bloom’s practice they put the needs of the pet first. “If pets don’t like being up on high exam room tables, then we examine them on the floor,” he says. “If they don’t like liver-flavoured treats, then we offer them chicken-flavoured treats. If they feel more secure being near their owners, then we do their entire exam, vaccine, blood sample collection, etc. beside their owners.”

“Fear Free visits simply have a different approach, a different feel, a different vibe, and a different experience for everyone involved,” he says. “It’s healthcare the way you thought it ought to be.” ■

38% of cat owners find it stressful to take their cat to the vet and 58% report that their cat hates going to the veterinary clinic.

 ?? ?? Dr. Marty Becker
Dr. Marty Becker

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