Tuesday, August 7, 2012

1030. Email about euthanasia

E-MAIL TO DR SING DATED JUL 25, 2012

Hi Judy,
I have a 17 yrs old dog and she is partially blind, cant hear much as well.
She whines alot and we feel it's a torture for her, so we have decided to put her to sleep.
May I know how much is the fees and if we can make an appointment for end of this month?

Cheers,
XXX

E-MAIL FROM DR SING DATED JUL 25, 2012



I am Dr Sing from Toa Payoh Vets. The cost is $60 for euthanasia. Cremation may be around $200 depending on the size and breed. Appointment ok for end of month. Pl phone 6254-3326.  

E-MAIL TO DR SING DATED JUL 25, 2012
Jul 25


to me
Thank you Mr. Sing.

1029. Papilloma in a CKC - a photo-essay

My script for this photo-essay

STRUCTURE OF A PHOTO-ESSAY - ORAL TUMOURS

1. Opening shot - TUMOUR
2. Middle - Contents - Diagnosis and treatment
3. Closing Shot -  NO TUMOUR
4. Key Shots x 2
5. Theme - Be Kind To Pets - Examine her mouth weekly



The older dog is a family member. Externally groomed, eats and drinks normally

Mouth seldom examined

A lump appears. It grows bigger and bigger

Is it cancerous? Doubles in size within a week. Likely to be cancerous.

How to find out?

Anaesthetic risks in old dogs. Blood test to screen health. Health OK. Take the risk. Yes.

Biopsy as recommended by the vet professors during undergraduate studies. This is the usual practice.

No. Fast growing tumour may be malignant.

Anaesthesia. What type? Intubation normally. But this endotracheal tube blocks the view.

IV Anaesthesia. Effective? Yes if you know the dosage. 50% will do.


Electro-surgical excision including extraction of teeth

Send to lab for histopathology  -  Squamous papilloma. So not an epulis.
Good news. Not cancerous.

Goes home happy owner.

Examine your older dog's mouth weekly for oral tumours











1028. Beautiful creative photography by sanjay kothari

http://sanjaykothari.com/flashweb/index.html

Incredibly beautiful photography

1027. English bulldog has ringworm again - for adoption

In April 2012, the gentleman in his late 50s was given a female English bulldog as the other party could not maintain it. He had become very successful in his back up services to multinationals and in buying properties with enbloc potential. He could buy the Mercedes SLK sports and any car that the ordinary vet can only dream of.

Yet I noticed he had no great love for dogs. Once, some years ago, he dumped his Jack Russell onto me as he did not want it. I had to find a home for it. Today, he came as his dog had ringworm on her backside, parts of the face and head.

"Did she recover in April when I prescribed the treatment?" I asked him. He was complaining about the veterinary fees of around $400 which included much treatment including tests for mites, not that he could not afford them. His idea of fees to treat skin diseases was less than $50.00. So I did not expect to see him again.  

This time, his bill was around $200 as ringworm was evident and I did not bother to check for mites or do other tests. But he complained again. "Skin diseases are not cheap to treat as the dog needs a longer course of medication, unlike a simple fever. If insufficient medication is given for a period of time, the skin disease is not cured and the owner has to come back to the vet again. That is why I prescribed medication for 30 days, not 7 days.

"This dog needs a lady who will care for her," I said. "English bulldogs need daily maintenance and a gentle lady who cares for her will be the best owner. Or you can give her to the dog breeder."

"No dog breeder," he said. "He will just use her for breeding!"

Skin diseases are expensive to treat because they need longer treatment, in my experience. In this case, the dog had recovered and that is why the owner came back when she has a "relapse" due to unhygienic cage or some contaminated areas.
 
I expect this dog to recover in Sep 8, 2012.

Any reader who can provide a good home and wants to adopt this 2-year-old English bulldog, let me know by emailing to judy@toapayohvets.com


 

1026. Skin disease in a German Shepherd - buying shampoos only

NO DOG BUT SHAMPOO

Today, Aug 7, 2012 6.30 pm, a lady in her late 40s came in to buy 2 bottles of the green shampoo for her family German Shepherd. "It is best to get the dog in for a check up," Dr Daniel told her as the dog still has skin disease.

 "My father and her maid had brought in the dog around Chinese New Year and Dr Vanessa had given it an injection," she said. "As the dog is too large, we don't bring her in to the vet but just buy the shampoo."

I did a "trust and audit" and by checking the medical records. She bought the shampoos on Sep 27 2011, Jan 20, 2012 (Chinese New Year on Jan 23, 2012), Mar 16, 2012 and May 17, 2012 and showed the lady the records.

"Skin diseases in dogs should not persist for so long as they can spread and cause itchiness," I took out the case sheets to investigate.  " There was no dog present on Jan 20, 2012 when your father came with the maid," I said. "He bought the green shampoo only. So the bill of $30 reflected on this product purchased." It is always good to show the case records to the owner to communicate clearly.

I showed the lady the earlier case sheets. The dog was born in 2002 and had one skin disease treatment in 2004 by me. Then it came for its annual vaccination in Feb 2007, March 2008 and March 2009. No more visits till Sep 27, 2011 when some family member came to buy the green shampoo, an anti-tick spot on and an anti-fungal cream for "skin problems" from Dr Vanessa. On her case sheet, she advised review and clipping for skin disease, but there was no response from the owner.

"This person must have loved the German Shepherd very much to care to bring her for her vaccination in 2007, 2008 and 2009," I was surprised. "Most Singapore dog owners cannot be bothered with vaccinations after the puppyhood vaccinations. Who is this family member?"

"He is my uncle. He brings the dog out for walks."

It is important to educate the owner and to keep proper medical records about skin diseases. In this case, the records showed that the father had never brought the dog to Dr Vanessa for treatment and the lady was shown the case sheets and was satisfied.



  

Monday, August 6, 2012

1026. How to make a compelling photo essay in the internet age - Michael Freeman. Internet digital marketing. story telling

Ref: Digital photopro  Feb 2012    www.digitalphotopro.com



A photo essay or picture essay is a sequence of photos telling a story. It has:

1. A theme and the following fundamental structure
2. The Opener - The opening shot
3. The Body
4. The Closer
5. The Key Shots ( = climax or climaxes in short stories)
The Opener is the "hook" or attention grabber of the reader. Openers are not where you place the key shots.

The Body has a definite storyline.

The Closer - end with a bang or whimper? Ending with a bang is better choice.

The Key Shot. Not all images are fantastic. Be ruthless in weeding out images that do not make a photo essay strong. A high impact or key shot need to be part of a paced rhythmic photo essay. Earlier images need to build toward it.

The internet.
The future is in the form of the online slideshow. The tools are almost cinematographic, including strictly linear sequencing, transitions like cross-fades, audio, pans and zooms and more.




BASIC BUILDING BLOCKS FOR A PHOTO ESSAY


Title sequence
Opener (Opening image)
Establishment, setup
Buildup (= minor climax?)
Counter story, Second situation
Continuation
Climax, Key Shot
Resolution
Closer (Closing Image)


e.g. LIFE magazine 1948  "The Country Doctor"
show young dedicated smart doctors like Dr Ceriani can handle everything without federal interference. 

Opening image -  rural doctor walk down a road, doctor's bag to house call.

Closing image - modern surgeon exhausted after a late-night op but completely dedicated.
Code)



www.michaelfreemanphoto.com


-------------------------------------------

16 Jun 2021

JOB - Digital marketing trainee.
Job responsibilities

1. Formulating marketing strategies
2. content creation
3. copywriting
4. managing the organisation's social media accounts



Produce creative content, how to fully utilise all the marketing platforms, hone skills in strategy and branding and learn more about marketing analytics. 

Vision: Develop skills in using marketing as a storytelling medium and running events as a community-building platforms. Strategising analytics to maximise the reach of the content that I put out. 


 
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Sunday, August 5, 2012

Sunday Aug 5, 2012's interesting cases

Sunday

CASE 1.  A lady in her late 50s came to buy S/D diet in cans for her Jack Russell and complained that it was rather expensive. She had been buying S/D without her dog being checked for urinary stones as she just popped in from her lorry and bought the food. I was surprised and told her that S/D diet is not meant for more than 6 months. In any case, the dog has no blood in the urine nowadays.

HISTORY
Jack Russell, Male, 9 years old today.

7 years old. Mar 24, 2010 - Vomiting. Thick urine. Blood in the urine.
UTI. S/D can recommended by Dr Jason Teo.

I advised urine test. She said she got the urine collection bottle.
"Nobody told me anything about taking S/D diet for a long time," she said.
"It is unfortunate that you did not consult any vet, but just dropped in to buy the S/D." I happened to be present at the receptionist table when she came in this morning.

I got her to take the urine sample first.

CASE 2.
A boy doing his N levels came in with his 2-year-old grey dwarf hamster, itching in the right side of the face and ear. "How much is the consulation fee and overall treatment?" his lady friend asked. "You need to put the hamster here for 7 days, the overall charge is around $80," I said. "From my experience, your hamster has something dropped inside his right ear. I need to put him under gas anaesthesia and irrigate the ear."

"Can he do it?" the lady friend asked.
"Not possible as he does not know how and the hamster may die of fright if he forced the hamster to irrigate his ears."
Much explanation must be given to satisfy the lady friend.
After they left, Dr Daniel put the hamster under anaesthesia and fished out a big brown waxy lump from inside the right ear. Problem resolved. I took a picture.

CASE 3. 9-year-old male cat can't pee.
Catheterised by Dr Vanessa after sedation. Blocked. She injected 2 ml of saline and relieved obstruction. Bloody urine came out. "Any urine test?" I asked. outShe said yes. I am strict on making sure that urine be analysed in urethral obstructions to check for urinary crystals and other factors causing it. Many vets tend to forget about it since the obstruction is resolved but there must be a certain procedure and process in such cases to maintain a high standard of vet care and medicine.

CASE 4. CATARACTS IN A 9-YEAR-OLD FEMALE SHIH TZU.
Dr Daniel phoned me as I was out buying lunch at around 12.30 pm saying a client wanted to consult me only.  He was worried about the eye and skin disease. As the famous chicken rice stall in Lor 4 had a long queue, I drove back and saw my old customer.

1. Mature cataracts - nothing much can be done unless the owners want expensive surgery of around S3,000/cataract removal.
2. Vulva was swollen 3X. I checked the mammary glands. Still a bit of milk was seen though the dog had heat 2 months ago. "Lots of milk," the thin 9-year-old girl told me. I advised spaying but the husband had objected some years ago. "He is afraid of bad news," the wife said. "What bad tumours?" I asked. "Like a tumour. You had removed a tumour from her head last time. So, tumours are bad news." I advised blood test and spay if possible 2 days later.

3. Skin disease. Scales of elbows and fore-arms, neck skin almost bald, Anal sac impaction? I asked Dr Daniel to express the gland after checking them with my fingers. "There should be nothing," I said. Dr Daniel took a piece of tissue and expressed a small drop of brown oil. I took another try. There was no swelling. Suddenly 5 dark brown oily spots squirted onto my right elbow, missing the sleeve of my white shirt. It was unexpected as I had said: "Not to stand behind the dog while expressing her anal glands. Some oil may shoot into your face!"

Since the owners lived in Admiralty Road and would be working, I proposed warding the dog for clipping of coat and spaying if blood test showed normal results. Suddenly, the little girl's eyes teared. "Why are you crying?" I asked. "She sleeps with her dog every night," the mother said.
"Is she your only child?" I asked. "Yes," she said. I explained to the little girl that her dog needed treatment for the skin disease so that there would be no scales dropping on the floor. "Did you see the dandruff on the floor?" I asked. "Can't see, the floor is white," mum laughed. As the little girl was still crying silently, I had to console her rather than laughing with the mum. 9-year-olds are smart nowadays.

Although the dog is 9 years old, I advise spaying to stop the false pregnancy. "There are signs of bilateral alopecia coming," I showed Dr Daniel the lesser hair on both flanks. "Actually, I had shaved off the hair," the husband said to me. "Well, the hair is finer in the flanks as compared to the thicker hair on the forehead and chest," I showed Dr Daniel. "Bilateral alopecia could be endocrine, ie. hormonal cause and sometimes spaying resolved  the problem."

I said to the owner: "Your dog is very thin. I can feel the spinal bones."
"I don't know why," the husband said. "She eats a lot." A blood test was approved and would be done.