Awesome vet's bill
Author
Discussion

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

91,510 posts

289 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
My cat has to go in for a check-up with a vet.

Consultation if I take it in: £62. Fair enough, we know they're not cheap.

But cat is really not keen on being stuffed into a carrier and driven anywhere so I asked how much a home visit might be. 'It depends on mileage' they said. 'I live 1.5 miles away' I reply. After a brief check they come back: '£212'.

The poor receptionist couldn't grasp that I declined on the grounds that it was barkingly insane.

Is there any other profession that charges £50 a mile?

Badda

3,642 posts

106 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
A home visit for a cat?! rofl

Wacky Racer

40,714 posts

271 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
I think you know what the answer is.

It's a cat ffs! smile

I've had five of them over the years, I'm sure it will be OK for a five minute drive,

You could always walk it there.


HTP99

24,751 posts

164 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
It's not really £50 per mile though is it, the vet going out to your place, for a check up or whatever, will be missing out on at least 2 other appointments.

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

91,510 posts

289 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
Badda said:
A home visit for a cat?! rofl
Some people have no transport, eg disabled, elderly, blind etc.

For the minor things like claw clips there's a great VN who charges £25 a visit and thus saves us both the trouble smile

barryrs

4,960 posts

247 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
TBH I would expect anyone similarly qualified to be charging around £150 an hour labour only, so in that case it doesn’t seem unreasonable.

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

91,510 posts

289 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
barryrs said:
TBH I would expect anyone similarly qualified to be charging around £150 an hour labour only, so in that case it doesn t seem unreasonable.
I'd buy that. The consultation (check-over for a repeat prescription) will last 5 minutes and the journey is no more than 5 minutes each way as well.

Wacky Racer

40,714 posts

271 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
I'd buy that. The consultation (check-over for a repeat prescription) will last 5 minutes and the journey is no more than 5 minutes each way as well.
"It's only a five minute job".........I've heard that before,

zetec

5,031 posts

275 months

Badda

3,642 posts

106 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
Some people have no transport, eg disabled, elderly, blind etc.
And if those people have no way of getting to a vet, or the means to pay for a home visit, they shouldn’t keep an animal.

Mr E

22,722 posts

283 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
zetec said:

For the record. I have two more tabby cats. They don’t like the vet much either.

normalbloke

8,528 posts

243 months

Badda said:
A home visit for a cat?! rofl
Yep, we do. We have 5. One of which is so nervous outside her environment, that she managed to harm herself in the carrier enroute once. It’s also not too extortionate when the vet comes to see all 5 for checkups and jabs etc. If anything serious needs doing, they will come here and sedate the nervous one and transport her both ways. Sounds OTT but I couldn’t give a toss about the money, just the end result.

TheBALDpuma

5,912 posts

192 months

Yesterday (17:10)
quotequote all
HTP99 said:
It's not really £50 per mile though is it, the vet going out to your place, for a check up or whatever, will be missing out on at least 2 other appointments.
Yeah this is the point the OP is missing. They can no longer run back to back appointments, so they are missing at least the sessions before and the session after the OPs appointment. And at £62 per appointment for a check up - the absaloute minimum cost to the vets if £186, plus fuel etc.

I would actually wager that it would be significantly less profitable to do a house visit at £212 per visit, than just run in house appointments.

h0b0

8,910 posts

220 months

Yesterday (17:48)
quotequote all
Back in the late 90's my friends parents were hippies who also were vets. They had met while at university and opened a small practice in our village. They were passionate about animals and not money. This was before it was normal to have pet insurance.

Through their passion, they were highly recommended and their practice became too popular. This became a problem so they looked at ways of balancing demand. They first opened a bigger practice and hired new vets. Demand still grew. They then doubled the prices. This only doubled the demand.

They felt they could not be vets anymore and ended up putting a manager in charge and stepping away from the business. They retired to France very wealthy but not doing what they were passionate about.

That is what money/insurance did to vets in England.

Hilts

4,664 posts

306 months

Badda said:
Simpo Two said:
Some people have no transport, eg disabled, elderly, blind etc.
And if those people have no way of getting to a vet, or the means to pay for a home visit, they shouldn t keep an animal.
Badda's Pistonheads' animal decree.

Where do I denounce those breaking it?

CrgT16

2,442 posts

132 months

Paying a highly qualified, highly regulated professional his fees? What are you complaining about? You want the convenience of said professional coming to your home but don’t want to pay it?

Should he come to you for free because he loves animals or can’t the vet warn his money in line to his qualifications/experience and under the heavy regulated profession.

That seems reasonable for the home visit have in line the context. A vet is quite a difficult degree and it’s heavily regulated. In comparison an electrician or plumber charge similar or more and have less painful regulation/code of practice or full time university degrees. A doctor, dentist or vet are always too much to pay in this country. People seem to have a problem in paying professionals accordingly.