Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - (Page 50) Mind Over Miller musings from Dr. Robert M. Miller Some versatility required M y first book was Most of My Patients Are Animals. Published in 1985, it mostly consisted of stories that had originally appeared in this column. It was easy to write fas- cinating true stories because I had an unusual practice. It was, I am sure, the most mixed of all mixed-animal practices. Robert M. Miller, DVM, is an author and a cartoonist, speaker, and Veterinary Medicine Practitioner Advisory Board member from Thousand Oaks, Calif. His thoughts in “Mind Over Miller” are drawn from 32 years as a mixed-animal practitioner. Visit his Web site at www.robertmmiller.com. animal hospital, an elephant training center, a camel breeding farm, an exotic-bird importer and exporter, and so on. Many of these facilities still exist half a century later, but they are no longer along our main street. They are now out in the country. For example, farther up the canyon in which I now live are three exotic-animal facilities that serve Hollywood, with an amazing collection of snakes, crocodiles, elephants, lions, tigers, and what have you. The introduction to Most of My Patients Are Animals was written by James Herriot, the most famous and talented of all veterinary authors. I once told him that I thought he was the best writer of the 20th century. A very modest man, he protested, “Oh, no! I simply tell of my fascinating practice.” “Nonsense,” I responded. “You have a boring rural Yorkshire practice. Yet you have become the most successful living author writing about veterinary practice because of your skill. Can you imagine what you could do with my practice?” Last July, I attended Dr. Dropping in for a visit. In his rural Swiss practice, Ron Fuller’s ninth annual Dr. Jürg Eitel sometimes makes calls and transports animal adventure in Switpatients by helicopter. My business card said “Medicine and Surgery of All Animals,” and that’s what we did. In addition to cattle and sheep ranches, horse-breeding farms, horsetraining stables, dog-boarding kennels, and my routine semirural pet practice, the community in which I lived had an enormous exotic-animal population that served the TV and movie industry in neighboring Los Angeles County. There was a private zoo, a circus headquarters adjacent to our zerland. It was an indescribable experience in the most beautiful of all foreign countries, featuring an amazing variety of CE experiences for a group of U.S. veterinarians, their spouses, and friends. One of the speakers was a rural Swiss practitioner, Dr. Jürg Eitel of Grono in the Italian district. I called him a Swiss Herriot, but he was also a Swiss Miller because the practice he described is as exotic as mine was, and it included experiences I never had. For example, how many of us hike mountains with a rucksack full of medication and supplies to treat cattle in areas with no road access? This trekking is common in the Alps, the most beautiful and rugged mountains in Europe. Dr. Eitel sometimes must make calls by helicopter to treat cattle, and he showed us slides of calls he has made to areas in which helicopters could not land. He had to descend on a cable. The Alps are so steep and precipitous that pack mules and horses are still used in some regions, so Dr. Eitel’s practice also includes treating them, and his hospital has facilities for both large and small animals. What a versatile and challenging profession we have. 50 January 2009 VETERINARY MEDICINE The views expressed in “Mind Over Miller” do not necessarily reflect those of the editorial and practitioner advisory boards or the editorial staff. http://www.robertmmiller.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 Contents Leading Off Letters Research Updates Idea Exchange A Modified Subconjunctival Enucleation Technique in Dogs and Cats Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques Author Guidelines Product Preview CE Form/Advertiser Index Marketplace/Classifieds Mind Over Miller Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 (Page Cover1) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 (Page Cover2) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 (Page 3) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 (Page 4) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 (Page 5) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 (Page 6) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Contents (Page 7) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Contents (Page 8) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Contents (Page 9) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Contents (Page 10) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Contents (Page 11) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Contents (Page 12) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Leading Off (Page 13) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Letters (Page 14) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Letters (Page 15) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Research Updates (Page 16) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Research Updates (Page 17) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Research Updates (Page 18) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Idea Exchange (Page 19) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - A Modified Subconjunctival Enucleation Technique in Dogs and Cats (Page 20) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - A Modified Subconjunctival Enucleation Technique in Dogs and Cats (Page 21) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - A Modified Subconjunctival Enucleation Technique in Dogs and Cats (Page 22) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - A Modified Subconjunctival Enucleation Technique in Dogs and Cats (Page 23) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 24) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 25) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 26) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 27) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 28) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 29) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 30) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 31) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 32) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 33) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 34) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 34a) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 34b) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 35) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 36) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 37) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 38) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 39) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 40) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Author Guidelines (Page 41) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Product Preview (Page 42) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Product Preview (Page 43) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Product Preview (Page 44) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Product Preview (Page 45) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - CE Form/Advertiser Index (Page 46) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Marketplace/Classifieds (Page 47) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Marketplace/Classifieds (Page 48) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Marketplace/Classifieds (Page 49) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Mind Over Miller (Page 50) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Mind Over Miller (Page Cover3) Veterinary Medicine - January 2009 - Mind Over Miller (Page Cover4)
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