Liz Buchanan BVSc MRCVS
Keymaster
Hello and I am so sorry to hear that there are financial problems at such a stressful time. Funeral arrangements and costs are always difficult to discuss, both in the human and animal world. It sounds to me as though your vet appreciates your emotional need to have your much-loved pet individually-cremated, and is keeping the body aside for you in order that such a cremation can take place as soon as you have the money together. I have worked at many vets where this practice is common and it has come about as a result of a harsh, business reality: that a pets' ashes are invaluable to the family, but also expensive. Once a vet has paid for this service, they cannot recount the cost elsewhere. Unless the family pay, they will be left with both the fee and the ashes to take care of. I have worked at practices that lost hundreds of pounds in unclaimed ashes and unpaid cremation fees each year, but still took care of the ashes. A vets is a business and this cost is not trivial to them either, much less the distress to the staff, so storing bodies until the costs are paid is a common solution. In my experience, vets do not take a cut of the cremation costs; this is done by a different company. The vet simply holds the body, often in cold storage. Naturally, a body would biodegrade but the cold prevents this. However, it can change the appearance. So although it is likely that your vet could show your pets' remains to you in order to prove that they still have them, they will probably prefer not to and you may prefer to remember your pet as they were. I don't think you need to worry about trusting them; one thing that you know about veterinary staff, is that many of them will be pet-owners too, whose pets have been through this very same system after they passed away.
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