Liz Buchanan BVSc MRCVS
Keymaster
Hello
Were the GI signs definitely caused by the medication? And if so, was it worse to give the Doxycycline and risk gastric side effects, or not to give it and risk possible Lyme disease symptoms from worsening? - because at the time, Lyme disease had not been ruled out. As well as the liklihood of getting it wrong, the relative severity of getting it wrong had to be taken into account (what could have happened if Doxycycline had not been given and it had been Lyme disease?) Your vet had a judgement call to make. The georgraphical location, recent cases and pets' circumstances could also have been important.
I would argue that most vets facing complex medical cases try to act in the patient's best interests, making the best call they know with the information available to them at the time. There is often a complex multitude of pros and cons involved with any decision and much of the time, these will be discussed openly with the owner. Of course, I am not a medical expert, so a specialist might get such decisions right more times out of ten than I would.
Nor am I a legal expert - and just for information, I live in the UK not the US and we don't really have much of a culture of litigation. As a general vet, it sounds to me that perhaps the vet was doing the best they knew with a difficult, complex case. I wonder if they would make the same decision again?
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