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All Pets Deserve Vet Care

All pets deserve vet care. There, I said it. Regardless if you got your little fluff from a pet store on sale for $15 or paid over $1,200 for the trendiest lizard, their worthiness for vet care does not change.

Pets Have Sentience

Most people already know and understand animals have emotions. They have empathy. Scientists recently proved even crabs and other decapod crustaceans like prawns, lobsters, and crawfish, can experience pain. The UK legally recognizes these and cephalopod molluscs, like octopi, squid, and nautilus, as sentient. They feel, remember, and avoid pain. They seek ways to lessen it. Many animals also have thoughts and mental concepts which allow them to understand the world around them.

Pets Have Empathy

When given the choice between delicious chocolate and freeing a fellow friend, rats will choose the latter. In fact, they will work faster to help when they experience the same plight before freeing a rat in the same situation. Rats also shared the chocolate with their freed friend when they had every opportunity to take it all for themselves.

So the rat may have thought, “Being in a slowly filling water chamber was cold and scary. I thought I was going to drown, and now it’s happening to another rat! They must be so terrified! I can’t let this happen. I have to help them. The chocolate can wait, and besides, it tastes better when I share it.” It sounds kinda like the origin story of a superhero, but rats do the same. 

But it’s not just rats who empathize. Mice, primates, elephants, and other animals also have empathy. They care for others in their own species, and sometimes, those outside their species. Just because they can’t speak our language doesn’t mean they cannot feel.

Many Pets are Self Aware

Snakes, horses, cattle, pigs, magpies, manta rays, and perhaps unsurprisingly, dolphins have self awareness. For the longest time, we believed this trait to be attributed only to humans. However, many other animals show evidence of it.

One way we test for it is the mirror test. While asleep, scientists mark an animal in a spot they can not see without looking in a mirror. When they wake up, if they look in the mirror and try to remove the mark, it is evidence they recognize themselves. Pigeons are one of many species to pass it. But scientists use many other methods, often adapted to be usable by the species being tested, to determine self awareness. For example, while dogs failed the mirror test, they passed the sniff test of self-recognition (STSR) with flying colors. This proves how an animal recognizes themself may differ from how a human does while remaining equally valid.

Pets Have Personalities

Many animals need training for proper behavior.

Personality is an individual’s unique way of thinking, acting, and feeling. It is the combination of preferences and behavioral differences between individuals which is consistent across different situations. You may already know dogs and cats have personalities. However, science discovered fish, sea anemones, spiders, elk, sharks, mice, and over 100 more species also have them. This includes rodents: rats, hamsters, gerbils, and more. Many scientists suspect individual personality is universal across the animal kingdom and has a significant role in nature.

Pets Can Suffer Mentally

Mental health is not just a human condition. Dogs, cats, horses, and other animals can experience depression, anxiety, dementia, obsessive-compulsive disordersPTSD, and other mental health conditions. 

Dogs can get lick granuloma from obsessively licking their paws. They also can suffer separation anxiety to such extremes they might claw a door bloody trying to get to their people. Common treatments for this are antidepressants, calming music, desensitization training, and exercise. Sounds kinda familiar to what your doctor would say, doesn’t it?

Animals Understanding Humans

Some Pets Can Speak

One bird, Nk’isi, could speak in more than just repeated phrases. With a vocab of over 950 words, she also understood their meaning and could combine them into unique phrases and use proper tenses. But it’s not just birds, dogs and cats can, too. What About Bunny? Is about a dog, part of a formal scientific study, who went viral. She started working with buttons at 8 weeks old, and is now consistently, accurately using them to communicate. She even uses the words she has to talk about new concepts she does not yet have a button for. Her journey is being studied, along with many other dogs and even cats, by scientists in California to better understand them. Some other species can also understand words.

Understanding Human Behavior

Horses understand human emotion, changing their reaction based on human anger and happiness. Science shows evidence dogs also recognize emotion in human facial expressions. They make decisions based on their understanding of human emotion. They can understand your tone of voice, basic gestures, and body language.

More Than Just Monetary Value

Your pet can think, feel happiness and sadness, have empathy and a willingness to help. That hamster you got for free on a second hand website can form a bond with and remember you. Their quality of life depends completely on you. They depend on you to give them a proper enclosure with enough enrichment, food, and water. They depend on you to check them for health issues when they can’t verbalize complaints. Your pet relies entirely on you to give them a good, happy life. That includes vet care.

rats from A Tale of Tails Rodentry

Unfortunately, many smaller animals are valued based on their monetary value instead of who and what they are capable of. Mouse sick? Just replace it. Why bother bringing a rabbit to the vet when one can just get another bunny from the shelter? It only cost $35 last time. Why bring a hamster to the vet? It’s cheaper to flush it down the toilet. Statements like these shouldn’t be commonplace, but they are. 

Good vet care is as important in animal husbandry as providing a decent enclosure, food, and water. Knowingly and intentionally withholding veterinary care to a pet is illegal neglect. And while these small animals rarely get justice, it is still the law, and it causes unnecessary suffering. Taming an animal requires gaining their trust and starting a bond. Even if they don’t understand, intentionally withholding vet care is breaking that trust in one of the worst ways someone could.

Affording Vet Care

even fish deserve vet care when they can't be treated at home. The sad reality is over 55% of pet owners cannot provide proper vet care in an emergency. Having a plan for a veterinary emergency will help guide you during stressful times. Your vet savings may run dry when a bill is higher than expected. Having multiple backup options to fall back on is more important than many people realize. Expenses can grow fast. For example, my hamster, Raven’s vet bills were $437.92 USD at one vet, and about $200 at another. The vet generously halved the bill from over $800 to $437.92 because there was no way to save her. However, if she was saveable, the final amount could have soared to $2,000 or more. 

Exotic vets are more expensive than cat and dog vets. Therefore, it is important to save a dedicated vet fund, get pet insurance where reasonable and possible, and look into financing options ahead of time. Emergency funding can come in many forms: a credit card like Care Credit, financing options provided by some veterinarians, and angel funds like Saving Gracie, whose goal is to end economic euthanasia. No pet parent anywhere should ever have to put their pet down for a curable ailment they can’t afford to treat.

Here are some more last resort emergency vet funds:

https://www.petemergencyfund.org/

https://pawp.com/emergency/

https://petcube.com/emergency-fund/

https://face4pets.org/apply-for-assistance/

https://www.healspets.org/application-for-financial-assistance/

A pet insurance alternative: https://www.pawamedics.com/

Chinchillas are super soft but don't like cuddles The only benefit I get from you clicking the emergency vet fund links is the knowledge that you have a way to reach out and save your pet when they need it most. I do not get financial or any other compensation from you choosing to click those links. Please look into these options beforehand so you know their limits and whether they can help you when the time comes. Applications are not always open due to the vast number of pets needing their help, so I recommend deciding on more than just one to keep on speed dial for when you exhausted all other options.

References

Lage, C. A., Wolmarans, W., & Mograbi, D. C. (2022). An evolutionary view of self-awareness. Behavioural processes, 194, 104543. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.beproc.2021.104543

Appel, M., & Elwood, R. W. (2009). Motivational trade-offs and potential pain experience in hermit crabs. Applied Animal Behaviour Science. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.applanim.2009.03.013

Ben-Ami Bartal, I., Decety, J., Mason, P. (2011). Helping a cagemate in need: Empathy and pro-social behavior in rats. Science, 334(6061), 1427–1430. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1210789 Free PDF: https://europepmc.org/backend/ptpmcrender.fcgi?accid=PMC3760221&blobtype=pdf

Trösch, M., Cuzol, F., Parias, C., Calandreau, L., Nowak, R., & Lansade, L. (2019). Horses Categorize Human Emotions Cross-Modally Based on Facial Expression and Non-Verbal Vocalizations. Animals : an open access journal from MDPI, 9(11), 862. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani9110862

Albuquerque, N., & Resende, B. (2022). Dogs functionally respond to and use emotional information from human expressions. Evolutionary human sciences, 5, e2. https://doi.org/10.1017/ehs.2022.57

Evans Ogden, L. (2012). Do animals have personality? The importance of individual differences. BioScience, 62(6), 533–537. https://doi.org/10.1525/bio.2012.62.6.4

Sato, N., Tan, L., Tate, K., Yamada, K., Nakagawa, K., & Awata, S. (2015). Rats demonstrate helping behavior toward a soaked conspecific. Animal Cognition, 18(5), 1039–1047. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-015-0872-2

Schuster, A. C., Carl, T., & Foerster, K. (2017). Repeatability and consistency of individual behaviour in juvenile and adult Eurasian harvest mice. Die Naturwissenschaften, 104(3-4), 10. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-017-1430-3

Zanette, L. Y., Hobbs, E. C., Witterick, L. E., MacDougall-Shackleton, S. A., & Clinchy, M. (2019). Predator-induced fear causes PTSD-like changes in the brains and behaviour of wild animals. Scientific reports, 9(1), 11474. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-47684-6

Frank D. (2013). Repetitive behaviors in cats and dogs: are they really a sign of obsessive-compulsive disorders (OCD)?. The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne, 54(2), 129–131. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3552586/

Fitch W. T. (2020). Animal cognition and the evolution of human language: why we cannot focus solely on communication. Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, 375(1789), 20190046. https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2019.0046

Further Reading
Most Americans Have Pets. Almost One Third Can’t Afford Their Vet Care.

https://www.animalcognition.org/category/reptiles/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_psychopathology

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