All these sick cat stories is making me glad that we stuck to dogs and kids.
 
Jonathan A. Cass 
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Tancredi, Sue M.
Sent: Thursday, March 03, 2005 11:26 AM
To: Peter Coyle; Susan Jacobson; Kyle Cassidy
Cc: University City List 
Subject: RE: [UC] UPenn Vet Hospital



MY experience with penn vet has been bad. in fact, i once got a long letter
in the phila weekly about it yrs ago. 
i took my thunderbelly counterpart, huey, there for what i knew was stones
in the urine tract some cats are prone too, he was old, they totally
mis-diagnosed and wanted to do some unnecessary, expensive stuff and put
fear into my heart. when my doctor opened up monday morning, i took him
there (after a huge bill for nothing at penn vet). it was what i thought and
she fixed it. by the way my cat vet is cat vet of south street
(215-545-CATS) and she is the greatest doctor of any sort i have ever been
to. they are awesome there!!!
another cat i had, reggie, swallowed string, they charged me a lot, they got
in a fight with my friend who drove me there, couldn't do anything, and
charged a lot. Reggie died a few days later.
another friend of mine recently had to rush her cat to penn vet after he
just went limp in her lap (3yrs old). he was DOA. she told them she had been
stretching him like he likes. they told her she must have broken his back.
(she is not a strong woman) she was horrified. a few days later she was
reading that this breed is prone to an enlarged heart. she tracked down the
doctor at penn vet (not easy). since she was having him sent to a special
place where they cremate him and do this beautiful box, his body was still
there. she ordered an autopsy (she had to twist some arms). it turns out his
heart was huge and that is what killed him. all this cost her tons on money
and much, much distress.
so when it was huey's time to go, at 19, we nursed him thru the weekend,
until the cat vet on south st opened on monday. i did not want huey's life
to end at penn vet. the people at south st cat vet provided a beautiful end
to a very beloved animal's life. i will also treasure how that went down.
and they didn't charge me anything.  

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Peter Coyle
Sent: Thursday, March 03, 2005 11:05 AM
To: Susan Jacobson; Kyle Cassidy
Cc: 'University City List '
Subject: Re: [UC] UPenn Vet Hospital


Kyle -You should rename thunderbelly to leadbelly. 

Susan- 
My cat needed antibiotics, and Penn gave me liquid to shoot down his throat.
He brutally, and maliciously attacked me. So I opted for putting the
medicine in tuna, no problems. 
:P 

PS I went to penn because it was an emergency, I'm not rich. 
On Mar 3, 2005, at 10:35 AM, Kyle Cassidy wrote: 


I'm sure everybody will weigh in -- in my experience the vet hospital is
_very_ expensive and best left for absolute emergencies. If your cat is
bleeding from the ears at 3:00 a.m., vet hospital. If he needs a checkup or
a distemper shot, local vet. 

We gave mr. hugs liquid antibiotics (bubble gum flavored -- I'm pretty sure
it was just childrens edible antibiotics) he actually seemed to like it. 

Thunderbelly went to the vet hospital because he'd eaten a piece of metal.
They x-rayed him and told us it would probably work itself out. The visit
was $300. And the metal did work istelf out. He didn't seem to mind. 

-----Original Message----- 
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Susan Jacobson 
Sent: Thursday, March 03, 2005 10:20 AM 
To: [email protected] 
Subject: [UC] UPenn Vet Hospital 



Does anyone have any thoughts about the UPenn Vet Hospital, particularly
when 
it comes to cat care? 

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