'It was torture for both of us,' Regina woman has to drive cat to Saskatoon for emergency vet care - Action News
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Saskatchewan

'It was torture for both of us,' Regina woman has to drive cat to Saskatoon for emergency vet care

A woman from Regina was in urgent need of 24 hour animal care after her cat suffered a tragic health incident. Owner drove over two hours to the nearest clinic since the one in Regina was closed.

Veterinary shortage across the country continues

A black cat lays in it's owners arm as the woman smiles at the camera.
Chanel the cat was part of Joelle Hydaman's family for 11 years. (Submitted by Joelle Hydaman)

A Regina woman whose cat needed emergency medical care had to drive all the way to Saskatoon, because her local24-hour clinicwasclosed due to veterinary shortages across then country.

Joelle Hydaman said hercat Chanel went from being perfectly healthy to the complete opposite within seconds on the evening of May 16.

"There was no lead up,"Hydaman said. "I went downstairs I found her rolling around in pain and crying. She was completely paralyzed in her back legs and in excruciating pain."

Hydamanbegan calling vet clinics across the city. Most were already closed and directed her to 24 HR Animal Care Centre, Regina'sonly 24 hour veterinary clinic, but she found itwas also closed.

Since Oct.3, 2022, 24 HR Animal Care Centre has hada notice on its website statingthere would be service disruptions due to staff shortages.

"It was a split second thing that happened that required emergency care and they weren't there," said Hydaman

After many more phone calls, she found that thebest option for care was in Saskatoon.

"It was very hard to believe that my closest option was two and a half hours away, but I got in the car and I started driving because I wanted to at least be on the road. I didn't want to sit around and wait any longer," said Hydaman.

"[Chanel]was crying out the entire time and it was torture. It was torture for both of us."

A woman wearing sunglasses smiles with her black cat in the lower right corner of the frame.
Hydaman said Chanel was the queen of their house and acted more like a dog than a cat. (Submitted by Joelle Hydaman)

After they arrivedat the University of Saskatchewan's Veterinary Medical Centre, Chanel was diagnosed with thrombosis a blood clot had blocked amain artery, restrictingblood flow to her back legsand leaving her paralyzed. Hydaman was also told that Chanel had begun to go into heart failure, most likely because of the long drive.

"I had a pretty good understanding that this wasn't going to end well for her," she said.

The vets told Hydaman they could try surgery, but there was a good chance Chanel would relapse and may not have had the same quality of life.

Hydaman opted for euthanasia to end Chanel's suffering.

"When they brought her in and gave me a chance to kind of say goodbye, she was purring," said Hydaman.

The future of 24-hour vet clinics

A severe shortage of veterinary professionals is negatively impacting the health and well-being of the veterinary workforce and placingpressureon the care they can provide for their clients, according to the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association.

This issue has been ongoing.

Dr. Gillian Muir, dean of the Western College of Veterinary Medicine (WCVM) at the University of Saskatchewan, said there are severalfactors causing the shortage of vets.

One of themis an increase in pet ownership since the pandemic, she said.

Muir said most vet clinics are small private companies.

"It's becoming more and more difficult to provide [24-hour service]in individual practices or in smaller areas, where there's few veterinarians that can run the practice. Of course they can't work 24 hours a day," Muir said.

"So the shortage is just putting pressure on the ability of those veterinarians to really be there all the time for their patients."

WCVM has increased its class sizes from 78 to 88 seats to try to producemore veterinarians. It also has aprogram that allows veterinarians certified in other countries to take a proficiency exam to be certified here, which Muir saidplaces 55 qualified veterinarians into the workforce each year.

Hydaman said she understands health-care shortages.

"I work for the health authority, so I have a pretty good understanding of the current situation of our health-care system, but I had no idea that that was also the case for veterinarian care."

She said she would love to see more 24-hour clinics open so no one else has to experience this.

She said that it would have been helpful to have optionssuch as painmedicationto make Chanel comfortable duringthe tripto Saskatoon, or the option to euthanize her closer to home.

"I think that if the clinic is having difficulty filling that position for coverage, another clinic should be required to step up and take on that 24-hour care," she said.

The 24 Hour Animal Care Centre declined to be interviewed.

Remembering Chanel

A black cat with green eyes lays on its back looking at the camera.
Joelle Hydaman's cat Chanel was in need of urgent 24-hour veterinary care, but none was available in Regina. (Submitted by Joelle Hydaman)

Hydamansaid some people have been surprised that she drove all the way to Saskatoon for a cat.

"My response was that I was given no other option," she said.

"When I rescued her, I knew that I was taking on her care as a responsible pet owner."

She spoke about why she decided to add Chanel to the family 11 years ago.

"I had a Saint Bernard and I felt like he was lonely, so I decided to get him a cat. The two of them got along very well."

Hydaman said that although their home is a bit quieter new, she is happy Chanel is no longer suffering.

"She loved her people, she loved her family," Hydaman said.

"She lived a good life."

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story stated that Dr. Gillian Muir said most 24-hour vet clinics are small private companies. In fact, she said most vet clinics in general are small private companies.
    Jun 06, 2023 10:08 AM CT