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After dozens of desperate phone calls to veterinary clinics, Peggy Sheldon was anxious to find help for her sick, 7-pound puppy.

Not only was her local clinic in Northfield booked out for weeks, but so was a string of others she called across the Twin Cities. Her dog was struggling to keep food down and spraying blood while urinating, but emergency clinics were deluged with more dire cases.

The COVID-19 pandemic, which has created shortages in everything from toilet paper to restaurant staff, also has taken a toll on veterinary clinics, making pet care often tough to find.

"I alternated between feeling angry and helpless," said Sheldon, who spent weeks in search of answers and then a needed surgery, for Brie, her Teddypoo pup. "[The clinics] were swamped."

Brie, Peggy Sheldon’s 22-month-old teddypoo.
Brie, Peggy Sheldon’s 22-month-old teddypoo.

Provided by Peggy Sheldon, Star Tribune

Many veterinarians in Minnesota and across the country are struggling with a backlog of cases that began early last year when the pandemic forced clinics to shut down, except for emergency services.

"We were trying to preserve PPE [personal protection equipment] for the human side of care," said Dr. Connie Sillerud, president of the Minnesota Veterinary Medical Association.

When clinics reopened several months later, many restricted the public from their facilities, often requiring pet owners to remain in their cars while veterinary staff took the animal inside for care. Veterinarians often communicated with pet owners by phone after the exam.

"Usually you would have talked to them during the exam," Sillerud said. "So a visit that normally took 15 minutes became 35 to 40 minutes." The result: Veterinarians saw fewer patients in a day, making it difficult to tackle a rising backlog of cases.

Twenty months later, many primary care and emergency clinics are still overwhelmed — a crisis that has some pet owners waiting weeks to get a primary care appointment and months for specialty care, Sillerud said.

Some veterinarians say one reason for the uptick in demand is likely that more people got pets while hunkered down at home. But data from the Humane Society in Minnesota and a national veterinary organization indicate a pandemic pet boom may be overstated.

The Humane Society in Minnesota typically tallies 15,000 to 18,000 adoptions a year, but that number dropped to about 11,000 in 2020 — the first year of the pandemic, according to Dr. Graham Brayshaw, the Humane Society's director of animal services. Adoption numbers this year likely will hit 10,000 or more, he said.

Nationally, the approximate 2.3 million animals adopted in 2020 from more than 4,000 shelters was the lowest number in five years, according to the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association. The decrease likely was because COVID restrictions slowed the adoption process, fewer animals were available in part because the number of people who relinquished pets was down and animal control was less active in picking up strays, according to the journal article.

While shelter adoptions dropped, Brayshaw said, some breeders may have received more calls for pets. "Desire shot up through the roof," he said. "Everyone wanted a puppy, so a breeder who made a good living is now booked years out or several months out."

Meanwhile, demand for veterinary services likely increased because pandemic lockdowns meant some people who spent less money on restaurants, entertainment and travel had more discretionary income for their pets, Brayshaw said.

Being at home more also meant some new and existing pet owners began seeing issues that were sometimes just normal animal behavior.

"People would say, 'Oh my god, my dog is lethargic. He's sleeping all the time,'" said Jodi Harrod, hospital administrator at South Metro Animal Emergency Care in Apple Valley. "But that's what dogs do when you're not home all the time."

Her clinic also fielded more calls for chronic conditions that pet owners likely hadn't noticed before.

When some pet owners couldn't get in quickly enough to see their primary care veterinarians, they lined up outside emergency clinics, Harrod said.

"Our business at the emergency clinic tripled when the pandemic hit, and it hasn't stopped," she said. "Before the pandemic, we would have 15 cases on a weeknight. Now we have 30 to 45. On weekends, the typical wait time for a non-critical [issue] is averaging four to six hours."

Emergency clinics often triage cases — the worst are seen first. That often means less urgent cases aren't seen immediately, if at all.

Two years ago, providers at the University of Minnesota's Lewis Small Animal Hospital never imagined turning away a patient in need, said Mike Henson, the hospital interim director.

But now the intensive care unit frequently is at capacity because of space and/or staff limitations.

"The fact that we can't serve them immediately creates significant moral stress that affects the veterinary teams," Henson said.

Meanwhile, some pet owners have become testy.

Harrod said it's understandable that people dealing with a sick animal desperately want care for their animals. "But it's getting to the point where people are downright rude to us," she said. "They call us names. They curse. It gets old really, really fast."

Recently, a pet owner screamed at Harrod after noticing other dogs going ahead of his into the clinic during his four-hour wait. "I said, 'You're right. But if you noticed, a lot of them didn't come back out,'" she told him. "We did a lot of euthanasia that evening, and his dog had a minor injury."

At times, her staff euthanizes as many as 14 to 16 very sick animals in an evening, Harrod said. "That takes a toll on staff," she said. "It's very draining."

Compassion fatigue, exhaustion and stress were bubbling under the surface even before the pandemic hit. "Then a lot of people got burned out during COVID and left," Sillerud said.

Some veterinarians retired early while a shortage of front-office staff and veterinary technicians — a field dominated by women — worsened as the pandemic put more stress on family life. Low pay, long hours and weekend shifts pushed some Minnesota veterinarian technicians and assistants to quit and take jobs that paid better and had more flexible hours.

In 2016, data showed that the career life of a vet tech was five to seven years, but now it's down to four years, said Allen Balay, who chairs a committee examining the vet tech shortage for the Minnesota Veterinary Medical Association.

A push for legislation is underway to license vet techs in an effort to raise their stature and pay in hopes of attracting and retaining them.

Meanwhile, the backlog of cases is beginning to shrink.

"It's slowly going to turn around," Sillerud said. "It will probably take another six months to get back on track."