JessieSalt
New User
Hi everyone,
I'm new here and was told I can post my veterinary question here. Thanks.
---
I've always liked my vet. Despite living in Surrey he comes from the same part of Lancashire as me and has often gone to great lengths to make both me and my horses feel comfortable. Once or twice he has even looked after my dogs when I have been away eventing and on holidays.
So, it is not without sadness and some trepidation that I ask the question: has he committed vet negligence? (I'm not going to name and shame him here as I'm worried about any potential backlash.)
I bought a horse a few months ago from a couple of sisters down in East Sussex where I live. They said he'd had a bit of leg trouble and had recently had a couple of months in which some unexplained niggle' left him a little lame'. But he was a beautiful horse to look at he had everything you would normally hope for and he made for a good ride. So, after making a couple of inspections myself I had him looked at by my vet who, following the pre-purchase veterinary examination, uttered the fateful words, He's in peak condition. You'd struggle to find a fitter horse outside of the Grand National.'What about the niggle?' I asked.Oh that,' he said. Probably just a muscular injury. It's healed now as far as I can tell. You'll be able to compete on this horse.'
So, I parted with quite a hefty sum and took the horse home in our newly-acquired top-of-the range horse box.
However, it was only two weeks after purchase that we noticed some things were not right the horse was clearly uncomfortable with weight bearing and had even once tried to throw my husband (Our daughter Sam is not allowed to ride and has to stick with our lovable Shetland 'Chet'). So, I again visited my vet and, after twice being reassured that everything was fine I had him looked at by another vet.
After a really exhaustive check-up he said he had found things on ultrasound which hadn't shown up on x-rays.He told me the horse has a distal sesamoidean ligament injury which has caused the whole structural apparatus of the leg to become unviable and there are accompanying avulsion fractures too. He said it was one of the worst injuries of its kind he'd ever seen. His words were, 'He doesn't have the weight bearing ability to carry a leprechaun, let alone a grown man.'
This was terrible news to me. Not only had I invested thousands of pounds on a horse that was unfit to ride and new equipment to transport him, but I would now struggle to even sell the horse. Should my vet have carried out an ultrasound in the first place? Shouldn't it have been done as part of the pre-purchase exam? I asked the vet giving a second opinion what he thought?
He said, I wouldn't like to say. But based on what you told me the previous owners had mentioned his history. I like to think that I would have performed an ultrasound.'
Now I'm left with the question of whether I should sue my vet for vet negligence. What's more, he has been a friend for nearly a decade. What would you do? Should I instruct a professional negligence lawyer?
Please let me know. I've done a bit of research already and have discovered that I have three years to claim. I don't want to do anything rash but, equally, I don't want to be afraid of pursuing my rights either. Please help, advice appreciated.
Jessie
I'm new here and was told I can post my veterinary question here. Thanks.
---
I've always liked my vet. Despite living in Surrey he comes from the same part of Lancashire as me and has often gone to great lengths to make both me and my horses feel comfortable. Once or twice he has even looked after my dogs when I have been away eventing and on holidays.
So, it is not without sadness and some trepidation that I ask the question: has he committed vet negligence? (I'm not going to name and shame him here as I'm worried about any potential backlash.)
I bought a horse a few months ago from a couple of sisters down in East Sussex where I live. They said he'd had a bit of leg trouble and had recently had a couple of months in which some unexplained niggle' left him a little lame'. But he was a beautiful horse to look at he had everything you would normally hope for and he made for a good ride. So, after making a couple of inspections myself I had him looked at by my vet who, following the pre-purchase veterinary examination, uttered the fateful words, He's in peak condition. You'd struggle to find a fitter horse outside of the Grand National.'What about the niggle?' I asked.Oh that,' he said. Probably just a muscular injury. It's healed now as far as I can tell. You'll be able to compete on this horse.'
So, I parted with quite a hefty sum and took the horse home in our newly-acquired top-of-the range horse box.
However, it was only two weeks after purchase that we noticed some things were not right the horse was clearly uncomfortable with weight bearing and had even once tried to throw my husband (Our daughter Sam is not allowed to ride and has to stick with our lovable Shetland 'Chet'). So, I again visited my vet and, after twice being reassured that everything was fine I had him looked at by another vet.
After a really exhaustive check-up he said he had found things on ultrasound which hadn't shown up on x-rays.He told me the horse has a distal sesamoidean ligament injury which has caused the whole structural apparatus of the leg to become unviable and there are accompanying avulsion fractures too. He said it was one of the worst injuries of its kind he'd ever seen. His words were, 'He doesn't have the weight bearing ability to carry a leprechaun, let alone a grown man.'
This was terrible news to me. Not only had I invested thousands of pounds on a horse that was unfit to ride and new equipment to transport him, but I would now struggle to even sell the horse. Should my vet have carried out an ultrasound in the first place? Shouldn't it have been done as part of the pre-purchase exam? I asked the vet giving a second opinion what he thought?
He said, I wouldn't like to say. But based on what you told me the previous owners had mentioned his history. I like to think that I would have performed an ultrasound.'
Now I'm left with the question of whether I should sue my vet for vet negligence. What's more, he has been a friend for nearly a decade. What would you do? Should I instruct a professional negligence lawyer?
Please let me know. I've done a bit of research already and have discovered that I have three years to claim. I don't want to do anything rash but, equally, I don't want to be afraid of pursuing my rights either. Please help, advice appreciated.
Jessie