Today's Veterinary Practice

JUL-AUG 2011

Today's Veterinary Practice provides comprehensive information to keep every small animal practitioner up to date on companion animal medicine and surgery as well as practice building and management.

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THE BACK PAGE | Probably the most rewarding aspect of my job is the research projects carried out with our trainees. My current research interests include heartworm disease; in particular, investigating the problems reported in the Mississippi River delta region (to learn more, view Current Controversies & Dilemmas in Heartworm Disease at tinyurl.com/heartwormwebcast). My other research interest is the management of heart failure, with a focus on drugs that suppress the renin- angiotensin-aldosterone system, such as ACE inhibitors and mineralocorticoid receptor blockers (spironolactone). What should the clinician be aware of with regard to heartworm disease? Despite having 8 effective heartworm products on the market (with differing spectra of parasitic activity and methods of administration) that require administration as infrequently as monthly to every 6 months, we are not winning the battle on heartworm infection. Sales of heartworm preventive products are on the decline, owner compliance is poor and, in this decade, a quarter of a million cases are recognized each year in dogs receiving veterinary care. This does not take into account the hundreds of thousands of dogs that do not receive veterinary care or heartworm preventive. What do you feel are the most important issues facing the veterinary profession? I am not sage enough to really answer this question, but I will share one concern regarding escalating veterinary fees and total costs per case. Despite reports that pet owners are willing to spend money to care for their pets during the economic downturn, many simply cannot afford veterinary care, even moderate veterinary care, particularly after going through a diagnostic/therapeutic process that has weakened them financially prior to referral. While I am an advocate of veterinarians receiving adequate compensation, which has often not been the case, recently I have become concerned that the pendulum has swung too far in the other direction. I worry that veterinarians’ status in the public eye will deteriorate and we will lose the respect we now enjoy— even in the presence of better care. What is the most exciting change you’ve seen in veterinary medicine? The advent and progression of veterinary specialization began around the time that I became a veterinarian. It has been accepted, progressed, and escalated at a rate that I never could have imagined. This has truly improved our profession’s reputation, increased the public’s expectations, and dramatically improved the high-end of veterinary care. What is the worst change that has taken place during your career? The increasing practice of using the Internet as a source for information regarding diagnosis and treatment of patients (eg, discussion forums) instead of turning to peer-reviewed material or communicating directly with a specialist. We encourage our clients to come to us with questions regarding their pets’ care instead of using Internet forums…we should hold ourselves to the same standards. Dr. Atkins and his step- daughter, Stephanie, on Mt. Rainier for his 40th birthday. How do you manage your work–life balance? In truth, I do not. There is virtually no separation and I should not be considered a role model in this regard. However, what I have done well is to break away and go places, often exotic places—in many instances, because I am a veterinary academic. In 2007, my wife and I hiked from France all across Spain (500 miles) on the Camino de Santiago de Compestela over 35 days. I have trekked in the Himalayas, climbed Mount Rainier, hiked the Continental Divide Trail with my friends Greg Grauer and Rance Sellon, hiked the Inca Trail with my wife and Terri DeFrancesco, taken a train across the Australian outback, rafted the Grand Canyon, camped within the Norwegian Arctic Circle, been on a remote tributary of the Amazon in Peru, and will be trekking in Patagonia this year. I honestly do not think that this represents balance but it does represent a method to escape and find the illusion of balance by geographic and communication (well, except for the BlackBerry in recent years) isolation, which is probably a good thing. Tell us about your most memorable moment as a veterinary professional? Memorable moments include receiving letters of acceptance from University of California–Davis, Angell Memorial Animal Hospital, and into ACVIM for Internal Medicine and, later, Cardiology. But truly memorable events are different. One memorable event was diagnosing taurine-deficient dilated cardiomyopathy in a cat named Snowball. Her successful treatment began a long-term friendship with Jane and Terry Seaks. They have become friends of the NCSU College of Veterinary Medicine and funded the first endowed chair in the college’s history—The Jane Lewis Seaks Distinguished Professorship of Companion Animal Medicine. These generous, thoughtful, and forward thinking people have made incredible contributions to NCSU and veterinary medicine in general. The second is representative of the success and growth of our trainees. Just over a year ago, our service received an emergency—a 13-year-old dog with heartworm caval syndrome. This syndrome, which is highly fatal in young dogs, is a killer in older patients. The dedicated owner chose to treat and our first-year resident surgically removed the heartworms and managed the case through several months of complications, including heart failure, aspiration pneumonia, and septic arthritis. This took an incredible amount of intensive medical care, client communication, and just plain hard work. It was representative of a resident maturing into a specialist as well as demonstrating fortitude and an intense dedication to the patient and owner. It is incredibly rewarding to be a part of this type of “moment.” ■ July/August 2011 Today’s Veterinary Practice

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