Thank you for your patience, practicing veterinary medicine during a pandemic

Dr Sarah Boston
6 min readMar 27, 2021

I recently read this tweet from a stand up comedian I follow:

“Your dog is ready, now we will take an hour to bring her out to you” all vets

And it upset me in the way that Twitter is designed to. It got under my skin and it made me want to rage-tweet a response (which I did). But that still wasn’t enough for me to let this go because I sense that through this pandemic, the general public doesn’t understand what we have been going through as a profession. The only thank you I have heard from a public figure was from former First Lady Laura Bush, who graciously included us on the list of essential workers that she thanked during the star studded One World: Together at Home online Pandemic-alooza on April 19th, 2020 when we naively thought that this was going to just be a few months of this and that we were all in this together. It was notable then and it still is now, as veterinarians struggle to care for animals during “these extraordinary times”.

The reason that this snotty tweet, which was really meant as a joke, got to me is that is showed no compassion or understanding for how hard it is to practice veterinary medicine right now. We are invisible until someone needs our services, and then many of our clients are quite grumpy about the process…

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Dr Sarah Boston

Dr Sarah Boston is a veterinary surgical oncologist,author(Lucky Dog,House of Anansi Press),cancer survivor & comedian https://drsarahboston.com @drsarahboston