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I am livid with the shot, because, if he had cared at all to have a look at his files or even let me talk about his medical history, he'd know I have spent almost 3 months taking care of a constipated cat!!! What the hell is this about "drying his intestines"? I've been adding extra moisture to his food for months. I'm genuinely appalled.Raw & Home-Cooked Cat Food
I don't know if interacting with the members here who feed raw or home cooked would help, but we do have a forum for that subject.
That is pretty shocking about the vet, almost careless in what he told you and what he did, especially with the shot. Did he give you a bunch of random herbs and supplements? Calling other vets "morons" says a lot and, like you, I am surprised that he had no concern with balancing a home made diet with the necessary supplements.
The website seems incredibly informative and addresses variations in a home prepared or raw diet.
I would be angry, too.
Thanks for the link, I'll definitely have a look at the forum!
And the website is indeed informative. The vet goes into the materials you'd need, ways to properly cook the food, how to weight it, how to prepare it in detail, what to watch out for... what I'm a bit nervous about is that I'm a life-long vegetarian, so the learning curve will be huge to me because I don't even know how to handle meat, or how to store it... etc. My flatmate has offered to help me, so we'll see how it goes. I'll let him have a taste of vapor cooked rabbit meat, just to see if he'd be interested in it, once his bowels go back to normal. God knows if the diarrhea is gone, or if we'll go through a constipation phase again. Thanks to this big con of today!
I had one of my best experiences with a human doctor when I visited a holistic haematologist a couple of years ago. He asked me for a million blood exams, and then spent almost 4 hours (literally) going through each of the results with me and putting them in context. I finally learned that tiny annoying things that would pop up every once in a while were all related and part of a big health "concern" I should take care of. It was brilliant and informed me of which specialists I needed to see then, what I should be careful of in my diet, the type of exercises I should do, and more.I'm not a person who advocates against holistic medicine. But I've heard more stories like this (including human holistic medicine) than positive experiences.
Obviously, it all comes down to the individual vet and the level of care they are willing to put in. I've also been to conventional-medicine vets that were terrible at their jobs. So it all depends.
I personally have an overall skeptical view of holistic medicine, though.
It's highly dependant on the professional. In theory, holistic medicine should be good simply because it values looking at the individual as a whole instead of just medicating a symptom - which I've been tired of. I visited 3 doctors last year due to a skin condition that I was told had no cure and they all just threw a cream at me that I'd need to use forever (and couldn't use on my eyes, which was exactly where the main problem was), only to buy a book and read literally on the first page that it was related to my allergy of aspirin and the fruits I was eating. None of the doctors had ever so much as asked about my diet, they all said it was chronic. I stopped eating them and a week later my skin cleared, the problem never came back. I have since started eating them again, in less quantity and less often, as the book recommended, and still nothing. There are too many doctors that don't care at all about their patient - both in human and in veterinary medicine.