©Coneyl Jay | Getty Images
njections, intranasal drops and even oral vaccines can protect against the most common infectious organisms. ©Mario Forcherio / EyeEm | Getty Images
Room 3 sounded like a barnyard. It was an uncharacteristically slow (and peaceful) Monday morning at my veterinary clinic. Any illusion of tranquility was shattered by what could fittingly be described as an eruption of wall-trembling goose honking. Either someone had confused me for a farm vet, or I had a pretty good idea of what lay on the other side of the exam room door — and it wasn’t a winged critter.
“Chester caught a cough at the dog park!” That was the greeting offered by a frantic-looking woman clinging to 4-year-old Chester, a normally clamorous Jack Russell Terrier, who appeared poised to burst into another coughing fit. As I entered the room, Chester sprung from her arms and landed at my feet, and immediately froze, head down, neck outstretched and legs spraddled for a series of honking hacks. Once the jag passed, he resumed bounding over to give me a hello head butt.
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