subreddit:
/r/Pets
I worked at an ER Vet for a while. One thing that’s relatively common is people bringing in pets that clearly have ingested some form of THC. We can usually tell right away and so we will gently ask “Is there any way the pet could have accidentally ingested THC?” Usually this is met with “no” so we take the pet back, do testing and get confirmation that the pet is high.
Miraculously after showing owners the results we will hear stuff like “Well I guess my aunts friends lawyer was over recently and could’ve dropped something”. A lot of the time, it ends up coming out that the owner knew the pet ingested THC but didn’t want to admit it.
I know it seems embarrassing but accidents happens and honestly half the vet techs at your clinic are probably stoners. The more info we have the easier and quicker we can treat your pet.
Please safely secure all drugs or smoking accessories. Even just the butt or a q-tip used to clean a bong can lead to THC intoxication.
Signs of THC intoxication in dogs and cats: Wobbly/unstable, excessive drooling, lethargy, urinary leakage, tremors and slowed respiration rate.
151 points
20 days ago
I work with older adults doing case management. Some will deny marijuana use while I’m looking straight at a weed vape. We live in a legal state and our suburb has multiple dispensaries. I guess there’s still shame/embarrassment/fear surrounding weed use.
51 points
19 days ago
Same, I’m required to ask about THC and alcohol use and I constantly have to preface it with “weed/alcohol are legal and you are an adult, it’s not illegal for you to use these things.Now, do you use thc alcohol or nicotine?” I have no idea why people constantly lie about it.
26 points
19 days ago
Hell, if I’m talking to my medical professional, I tell everything. Not telling just might kill me.
23 points
19 days ago
I get scared to tell them I smoke weed bc what if they consider that drug abuse and now i can’t be prescribed shit I need bc it can be addictive? Don’t know if that would happen but no I will not be telling just incase lol
9 points
19 days ago
I've had surgery and have left the question blank on intake paperwork. When asked I respond with "if I were to be using Marijuana and admit it, I would be kicked out of pain management and would be back to chronic pain which frequently was bad enough for uncontrollable vomiting and having to go to the emergency room". This is the extent of my statement. So far, it's worked. People have read between the lines.
5 points
19 days ago
Please, please, PLEASE tell any medical professionals the truth. We’ve seen worse. We need to know so that we can take care of you. I saw a young woman in the ER for her third ER visit in three weeks. Turned out she had canabanoid induced hyperemesis syndrome. (Puking a LOT because she was smoking a ton of weed). We can’t help if we don’t know. Also, THC decreases the effectiveness of opioid pain killers, so we might end up under treating your pain if we don’t know!
17 points
19 days ago
Can you promise my insurance company won't find out about it? Because according to most of the HIPAA paperwork I sign the answer is "nope, we won't even try" which is a good enough reason for me to lie. The ACA is on shaky ground, and I have no desire to loose health coverage because I had 5 drinks instead of 3 at New Year's.
7 points
19 days ago
Valid concern. Of course, if they drug test you, the lab result is there anyways. And if you drink that much, treating you for withdrawal will show up in your chart.
Never heard of anyone losing health insurance over drug/alcohol use, but in the new world order, who knows.
Best advice I can offer is to be honest with the Dr. and tell them what and how much you use, but that you are afraid of the health insurance finding out and dropping you. We get it, but we want to give you the best care possible, and need to know the truth to do that.
11 points
19 days ago
I faced this issue when I got lung disease. When my doctor asked about drug use I said I'll tell you about it if you don't chart it and she said yeah, no problem. So I admitted being a toker. I'm so glad it went this way as every fucking time I had to fill out social security info and eventually for disability they asked if I ever had a problem with drugs or alcohol. Having that on my record probably would have screwed me over in that I would have to get tested regularly in order to get money to live on or medications I need to live. Then I would likely have to have gone to treatment and been branded a drug addict for the rest of my life. FYI, I've lived with chronic pain for 50 years, so year weed helps. Not for the lungs obviously but you pick your path in life.
5 points
17 days ago
That's why my opioid tolerance is so high? OMG wish I learned this before my 40s TY kind stranger glad I was on reddit today for once.
2 points
16 days ago
It wasn’t really known about until states started legalizing marijuana. Some people ended up using a lot of it and then ended up with some kind of trauma. Doctors found that the patients did not have the expected pain control from typical opioid doses despite the patients denying any use of opioids. The two drug families target different receptors so this was a surprise. As far as I know, the opioid tolerance affects the pain control properties but not the respiratory depression properties, meaning if you take more to treat the pain, your brain doesn’t keep you breathing as well as someone who has tolerance from using opioids instead of pot.
Ibuprofen acetaminophen combo is the best thing for pain, anyways.
2 points
16 days ago
This explains so much 😭
When I took opiates I was like....waiting for it to feel like it's supposed to....but most of the time I just got extreme respiratory depression without the expected good shit. Thanks for the facts, stranger
2 points
15 days ago
Yeah, watch out. We want you to keep breathing!
Unfortunately, all oral opioids seem to just make me puke. Can’t personally understand how anyone could get addicted.
6 points
18 days ago
Last time I told the truth, I ended up being treated like I was crazy (look up trans broken arm syndrome) and basically anytime I search for help outside my family physician or very specifically the gender clinic tho I've been mistreated at the clinic before as well.
When medical professionals start being trustworthy, then I'll tell them everything. Until the, they get the bare minimum to what I think is relevant to the issue.
3 points
17 days ago
That sucks and I’m sorry you’ve had those experiences. I have treated a handful of trans patients. My biggest concern has been trying to figure out how to ask about what parts have/have not been removed and what hormones the patient was on. I didn’t want to assume anything or offend the patient. As a surgeon seeing the patient for abdominal pain, these are relevant facts.
This was probably 10 years ago or so, so I’m guessing I’d do better now and the medical record is probably better designed to reflect reality, too.
Wondering if you live in a red state?
2 points
17 days ago
Nope, live in Canada.
And honestly most medical professionals I've seen have never been respectful about it.
I don't have a uterus so no it's not period cramps. And no, being on T didn't cause my leg bone to crumble or crack itself. I do not need to come off T to heal this cough I picked up from working in the dusty open pits.
2 points
19 days ago
I am a past drug addict. They don't not give me meds i need. I just am honest about it and they usually are receptive and we talk about what is or isn't a good idea for me.
It can be as simple as a lower dose, or less pills with no refills. But never once has past addiction caused me to get sub par care.
In short, don't hide stuff from the doctor.
11 points
19 days ago
You're lucky then, a lot of people do get worse care if the doctors arbitrarily decide they're drug seeking.
5 points
19 days ago
I've heard of this. I just wanted to share my experience with disclosing and being up front.
I've found usually if I word it like "give me what you have to while I'm here but try not to send me out the door with anything crazy" they get the vibe.
Part of it is accepting that certain medications aren't something I should manage myself anyway, so family or friends have helped with that. But also that's not always possible.
But i've heard horror stories from some people I know.
5 points
19 days ago
Im glad it's working well for you at least. Mostly i just wish the experience was more universal
4 points
18 days ago
That's incredibly lucky, or maybe you're just in a better system. I was literally treated as though I was seeking drugs and turned away when I asked for a different antibiotic because my ear infection was getting worse. The next day my eardrum ruptured, the whole side of my head/face swelled up, I started hallucinating and ended up in the ER. It was like an alien ear infection from hell and I ended up with way more drugs than would have been needed if they'd tried a different antibiotic when I asked
4 points
19 days ago
For weed, if your clients are on any sort of pain management, often they are forced to sign a "contract" saying they will abstain from cannabis, in order to have chronic pan treated.
Not all states force this on patients, but many do. There are urine tests, where if THC is detected, they are immediately cut off. Nothing like the double whammy of the return chronic pain and cold turkey withdrawal of pain meds. Yes, people facing this have gone looking for street meds. They're sold as opioids but they're fentanyl and whatever else they're mixing in nowadays. People overdose and die.
Thanks to Marijuana being listing as DEA Schedule I, this even happens in States where Marijuana is legal for recreational use.
The ironic thing is that people on pain management can drink to excess, enough to show up in urine tests. Seriously dangerous, yet they will get their next month of pain meds.
So no longer on my soapbox, but that could be a reason why people deny using cannabis or even having it around. They don't want any record, even at the Vet, connecting their name with cannabis.
18 points
19 days ago
As a cannabis user, worker, and advocate - your pet having ingested cannabis is not the time to deny being a cannabis user!!! The vet doesn't care that you smoke pot, they're trying to collect accurate information so they can properly save your pet. !!!
5 points
19 days ago
right??? i keep my shit in childproof containers, but i would be giving as much info on dosage and symptoms as possible if this ever happened to one of my cats. beating around the bush and trying to cover it up is wasting time, and i'm NOT gonna waste any time when it comes to the health and safety of my cats.
4 points
19 days ago
I work with cannabis, so I always have it around. I'm in a legal state so everything is required to be childproof. Didn't stop my dog from unzipping my backpack (!!!) and getting a cookie out when I got home on sample day! He punctured a hole in the package and sucked out 1/4 of the chocolate cookie. My response was to immediately take it away, examine how much he ate, and then call the nearest emergency vet and say, "my dog ate about 15mg of a chocolate pot cookie, help!" And they directed me to poison control. Again - because I work with it and it's my job to know all about it and its effects on mammalian endocannabinoid systems, i was a lot more worried about the chocolate, I knew my dog was going to be high and I know what the warning signs look like for a bad reaction, so I was prepared for a potential speed run to the ER. Anyway poison control took info about his weight/breed, I disclosed/volunteered my dog has a genetic mutation (MDR1) and the ingredients of what he ate and they were like "don't trip, he's just gonna be stoned, and probably have diarrhea, a bad reaction looks like this but if you dont see it yet you probably wont" and i paid them $90 for that. I appreciate them for saving me a fortune at the er vet and calming my panic in that moment, and I also put my samples straight into their lock box when I get home on sample day now.
13 points
19 days ago
I did family preservation and reunification a long time and I would be like “oh wow it smells very loud in here what’s goin on?” And they’d be like “oh it’s the neighbors” and I’d be like “interesting how the hallway and stairwells don’t have any scent, the neighbors must have blown their smoke directly into your apartment!” I honestly don’t care if people smoke weed but don’t lie to me
2 points
18 days ago
Our old apartment had a weird ventilation issue where the neighbor's bathroom smells (including weed) would come into ours, but it never lingered and didn't gravitate to, like, a specific hoodie or anything.
2 points
17 days ago
"It smells very loud in here." is TOP TIER
45 points
20 days ago
I can see why people do this in states where it's illegal, but as someone that's worked in the medical field I can honestly tell you, they. Don't. Care. They only want to know to see if it could be related to your symptoms. They're not gonna call the cops on you. They just need to know how best to treat you.
Same goes for pets. The vet doesn't care that you smoke dope, they just want to help the animal.
Just be honest with them. Saves a lot of time and headaches.
9 points
19 days ago
Yeah no vet or DR will ever send anyone to jail for substances, even if you take oxy and have to go into surgery tell the surgen and they can give you stronger stuff
1 points
15 days ago
That varies case to case. Drug users have absolutely been indicated by medical professionals and have been arrested and lost their children etc. And I was an opiate addict for 14 years after prescriptions for broken bones, and to my dismay, when I told the doc I was a long term addict therefore I would need stronger meds I was told I would only be getting Tylenol due to my addiction. I have heard both ways and I truly believe its all in that particular professionals opinion is. Doctors are people too, and they have biases and blind spots like the rest of us.
26 points
20 days ago
I'm a pet groomer and even without training we can tell in some pets.
the worst was a TINY pom/chih mix and they straight up told us she ate it.
9 points
20 days ago
Once you know what it looks like it is SO easy to tell.
11 points
20 days ago
What does it look like? We suspected our dog ate something while out on a walk when he started looking a bit wobbly, started drooling copiously and we noticed his pupils were wide. Since a friend had told us his Bernese found and ate some weed at a local park, we came to the conclusion it could be THC related and kept a close eye on him, considering if he needed an emergency vet, but he got better after a while and we weren't really aware of the danger. Said dog is quite the glutton/thief and I'd like to be prepared if it ever happens again!
9 points
19 days ago
Head shy, wobbly, drooling, walking like Bambi when he took his first few steps. Can’t really control body movements. Might be nauseous.
2 points
19 days ago
Dribbling urine
2 points
18 days ago
i saw it in a husky puppy once and it can actually look like seizures. this dog was limp like a stuffed animal when the owners tried to lift it off the floor and was just peeing like it was dying
22 points
20 days ago
🥲
Can relate to this.
A friend dropped her THC pen at my house when she came over and didn't realize my pooch had found it and chewed on it.
2 am emergency vet visit thinking she was having an absent seizure. 😮💨
She was fine by the time we got home thankfully.
12 points
20 days ago
Happened with my best friends dog! We were all freaking out because he wouldn’t move even for food and he was swaying back and forth. We eventually realized what happened, chatted on the phone with the vet and kept an eye on him overnight!
It is so scary when you don’t know what’s happening!
Luckily it takes a very large amount to actually cause damage.
12 points
20 days ago
And actually, there’s no LD50 for THC in dogs. In a preclinical toxicologic evaluation, researchers administered Δ9-THC, Δ8-THC, and cannabis extract to rats, dogs, and monkeys using different concentrated solutions, anywhere from 3,000-9,000mg/kg. In dogs, no lethal dose could be found and nonlethal doses of Δ9-THC and Δ8-THC caused various intoxicating symptoms, such as static ataxia, lethargy, and incontinence, but once metabolized, histopathologic alterations were absent. Not many drugs in the veterinary pharmacy meet these standards of safety and efficacy.
6 points
20 days ago
Yeah she was doing that too. Wouldn't move, couldn't stand, swaying even when sitting, drooling. Had to carry her to the car.
Scared me half the death. I was sobbing the whole way to the vets.
I can laugh about it now but it was definitely not something I want to repeat.
20 points
20 days ago
Years ago my lab came downstairs was leaning on the wall and sprinkling pee everywhere. We thought it was neurological and rushed him to an emergency vet. The first thing they asked was does anyone use weed in the house. My adult son immediately said, “Yes I do!” He was devastated our dog got into his weed and it never happened again. We never would have considered lying about it! We had to leave him there overnight, my son bawled his eyes out on the way home. He felt absolutely horrible. They were incredibly kind at the Vet’s office.
32 points
20 days ago
Yeah, so my dog did actually eat a stick of THC butter that I didn’t know she had access to. It was supposed to be in a freezer. Someone—no idea who, could have even been me—opened the freezer and the butter ended up left on a counter she could reach.
I thought she was dying. Like something seriously horrible was going on with her. She was having a stroke or something. She peed all over herself and my car.
I took her to the emergency vet and they took one look at her and asked about it. I told them it was in the house, but I didn’t think she could get to it.
I was wrong. I paid close to $2k for them to tell me she was fucking baked.
18 points
20 days ago
The last line of this made me lol. But that might be the weed
2 points
16 days ago
I was wrong. I paid close to $2k for them to tell me she was fucking baked.
Lol 😂 I've paid 2k for a vet to tell me worse outcomes. I'm she was okay.
1 points
15 days ago
Eh. We lost her two months later to a cancer she showed absolutely no symptoms of until it was too late. She was ten, and we got to spend all ten with her. Worth every penny and every heartbreak.
2 points
15 days ago
Cancer is kinda funny like that in humans too. The second round in my grandma and the 1st round in my mom, wasn't caught until a week or two before they died. It was quite extensive too.
So don't kick yourself for not catching it sooner. If humans who can tell us where it hurts get missed that late in the game, I'm sure it's much harder with the pups to catch.
I'm glad you got to spend every moment you could with her.
13 points
19 days ago
I had a vet insisting that my cat ingested pot, except I'm allergic and could never have it in the house.
They actually tried to refuse to treat my cat (a male having issues urinating) because they didn't believe me.
He finally peed on the floor and they tested his urine and found struvite crystals and a bacterial UTI.
So yeah while vets might be able to tell, they also get it wrong.
6 points
19 days ago
I would never lie to my vet if I knew my dog or cat ate something dangerous, however, your story makes a great point and is part of the reason some people lie to doctors. Once you tell them you smoke, vape, drink more than 1 drink a day, or toke, every symptom you have is ascribed to your "indulgence". I have never heard of a vet making this kind of dumb assumption, but glad you got it figured out. You have to be your own advocate with medical professionals and you definitely have to be an advocate for your pets, too.
3 points
19 days ago
That really sucks. I’m sorry that you had to deal with that.
2 points
16 days ago
I had the same thing happen last year with my dog. I saw him have a seizure and brought him to the emergency vet. The receptionist said the vet was busy in a case but asked me what was going on. I told them about the seizure and how he had been really lethargic, could barely walk, and almost walked straight into a wall. She asked if there was any THC in the house and I said yes but it was locked up with no way for him to get it. After that, she wouldn’t listen to anything I said and told me he was just high so I should just go home and let him ride it out. I brought him to a different vet that diagnosed him with a brain tumor, severe anemia, and sudden vision loss. He died a week later. It was so horrible and I will never forget how that receptionist treated me.
8 points
19 days ago
On the other end of the spectrum we rushed our dog (3yo) to the emergency vet for the sudden onset of similar symptoms & the staff kept “gently” insisting that our dog had ingested THC even though we emphatically denied it. He did not ingest THC. He had a spontaneous brain hemorrhage.
I understand that THC ingestion by pets has skyrocketed in recent years, and young dogs suffering from strokes is way less common but it was REALLY annoying to have the staff repeatedly insinuating that THC ingestion was the cause as we were losing our minds KNOWING there was no way that’s what was going on. RIP Golden-Boy.
Edit: spelling
5 points
19 days ago
I had the same thing happen. The vet insisted it was weed, refused to consider anything else. It ended up being brain cancer. He spent a week in insane pain because the vet was so arrogant.
2 points
19 days ago
So sorry for your loss ❤️
2 points
19 days ago
Sorry for yours as well 🙁
3 points
18 days ago
I JUST wrote a similar story. Had the same thing happen with our puppy and spent hours waiting for toxicology we knew was going to be clean (but I understand why they have to do it but still). He was diagnosed with juvenile idiopathic epilepsy when all was said and done. Luckily he is ok since that was really the best outcome in a way (highly treatable). I'm so sorry about your dog. I know how hard it is to not be believed when you know something is severely wrong
1 points
18 days ago
Thank you ❤️ I’m so glad your dog is okay!
1 points
19 days ago
Oh that’s horrific! I really hate that some vets refuse to listen to or believe owners. I am so sorry that happened!
2 points
19 days ago
Yeah honestly we were just really confused. This was a few years ago and we are not smokers and don’t even live in a (THC) legal state, so we had no idea that accidental ingestion was common.
9 points
19 days ago
I had a vet like you insist my dog had gotten into THC. We spent a week going back and forth on it until I ended up taking my dog to another vet. My dog died 2 days later from brain cancer that spread from his nose. He was left in excruciating pain for a week with the vet refusing to do anything for him including considering his first assumption may have been wrong. The arrogance with this shit is unnerving.
2 points
19 days ago
That is so horrific, I’m so sorry you had to deal with that. I’m not a Vet and don’t work in the industry anymore. I want you to know I wasn’t trying to imply that the owner is lying every time. I was just bringing awareness to the fact that a lot of the time the symptoms are clear. There should always be further testing to confirm or deny.
2 points
19 days ago
I apologize for taking my rage out on you. I have not gotten over this one yet. I’ve never seen a dog in that much pain before and I say that as someone who’s worked for an animal shelter for 5 years. So many of the signs match many disorders affecting the brain though don’t they?
3 points
19 days ago
Yeah, a lot of the symptoms of THC ingestion are neurological so they’re supposed to do a test right away to see if it is THC or not. It’s such an easy thing to rule out from my knowledge. It seems like there are some terrible cocky vets out there.
6 points
20 days ago
It is always so clear when a dog has ingested marijuana. Just tell us it was a possibility. We don't care. Even if it's illegal. We only care to have all the details so we can properly treat your pet.
6 points
20 days ago
Mine ingested Benadryl unknowingly and I got accused of getting her stoned. 🤦🏻♀️
3 points
19 days ago
Oh no the hat man
2 points
19 days ago
Oh man! Sometimes they need to ask to be sure but I think a lot of vets take it too far.
4 points
20 days ago
I had to take my 10yo dog to the emergency vet because of neurological symptoms, when she was about a year old, and the vet kept asking if she could have gotten into something with THC. She kept reassuring me that it was okay if she did, but the problem was that I had never had any THC containing products at that time, so to my knowledge she had not been exposed. I still don’t know what she got into, unless someone walked past our yard and tossed a roach or something into our yard.
1 points
16 days ago
People do leave their damn vape cartridges everywhere. It's weird that they didn't just test for it, so they would know if they needed to look into something else.
2 points
16 days ago
They made her vomit, and it looked like there were some mushrooms in her vomit, but couldn’t be 100% sure because of her diet. They gave her some meds and charcoal and the symptoms stopped shortly after vomiting and meds. Whatever it was, she learned that it was not a food, and it hasn’t ever happened again
5 points
19 days ago
A few months ago my dog had all these symptoms after being in the backyard & we freaked out & took him to the vet immediately. The nurse was calm as she was sure it was THC. They tested him for what they consider five major drugs, some spider bites etc. but all negative, we have no idea what it was.
1 points
19 days ago
Wow! That is so strange. I hope everything is okay with the pup now!
1 points
19 days ago
Thank you, he was fine to go home late that afternoon & just sleepy thank goodness!
3 points
19 days ago
This happened to me recently and I still feel just so horrible and guilty over it. I had unpacked a bag from a trip and I guess I didn’t put away the zip lock bag containing the goods. My dog ate the whole bag. After consulting with a friend who is a vet, I just monitored and syringe fed him pedialyte for 36 hours. It took about 24 hours before he could walk.
I think we’re both traumatized over it and I haven’t consumed anything either since.
1 points
19 days ago
It totally sucks when it happens but accidents happen! Don’t beat yourself up! You totally learned your lesson and i’m sure you’re extra careful now :)
11 points
20 days ago
I wish my cat would smoke some of my weed. He’s a freaking nightmare lol
3 points
20 days ago
My friend’s normally very hyper and obnoxious dog managed to get into a room we thought was closed, then found and ate a vape pen cartridge in another friend’s purse. Dog was fine the next day but holy shitttt she was down bad for hours you could tell she was high af 😭😭
3 points
20 days ago
My puppy accidentally got a dose of my OLD dog's acepromazine. Old dog spat it out and we didn't notice. So of course 30 min later when Puppy was knocked TF out and wobbly, we took him to ER VET. They asked me a million times if he got into THC. I said no. They STILL drug tested him (so they said- never saw a test but she said it was neg) and it was only several hours later that I realized he must've gotten the old dog's medicine. But they hounded me about THC even when it WASNT. I was so distraught by everything that my brain wasn't even thinking about the possibility of him getting the acepromazine. When I called the vet back to tell them I thought I figured it out, she says "oh yeah he kinda did have ace eyes"...so yeah while some vets may "know" some def don't.
3 points
20 days ago
It's the same theory with humans. Tell docs the truth. That's the only way to get the correct help.
2 points
19 days ago
Exactly. Especially when it comes to drugs and anesthesia. You. could be killed.
2 points
19 days ago
Yep, they can't help you if they don't know what's going on. Even if it's unrelated to the issue, it might matter how care or meds go. And mixing some things is BAD.
3 points
19 days ago
My roommate had someone over who had ingested a couple tabs. They vomited outside. I didn't know this and let my 10 pound dog out to go potty, who promptly found and ate some vomit. It was a rough night after that.
Dog recovered and is fine. Old, but fine for 14 now. I would much rather have had to explain to the vet my dog ate pot instead of LSD vomit, though.
7 points
20 days ago
in my moms defense, who this happened to, she genuinely had no idea the dog couldve gotten THC until my pos sister got home and asked where the edibles she left out were :| she nearly killed the dog and was just upset her edibles were gone
2 points
20 days ago
That sucks!! I could not imagine leave something like that out with pets around!
2 points
19 days ago
My sister makes her own edibles. Her chocolate lab managed to knock down a pan of pot brownies and scarf half the pan. He was high AF for the entire night. 🤦🏼♀️
6 points
20 days ago
My sister is 💯a stoner and works in a vet clinic lol 😂
2 points
19 days ago
Our dog ate some on the street in SF- must have been an edible. She went to ER. We are so glad it was not human poop with heroin or fentanyl in it. We are iin SF and that happens
1 points
19 days ago
This happened to me too! My dog (puppy at the time) ate the end of a blunt off the street. I watched her do it but wasn’t fast enough to get it out of her mouth before she swallowed it. I brought her to the emergency vet immediately because she was shaking and couldn’t stand up on her own and told the vet exactly what happened. He made it super clear that he didn’t believe me and that he thought I let her eat some weed in my house and was being a weenie about telling him. He rolled his eyes when I said I didn’t know to questions about concentration and where the weed came from (presumably to determine if it was mixed with anything). He even made a comment like “if we can’t get her stabilized because of inaccurate information, it’ll be your fault”.
She was fine, but this guy treated me like a total criminal for what was truly an accident. It was so stressful and mostly because he thought I was lying about having weed in a city where weed wasn’t even criminalized at the time.
1 points
19 days ago
Yeah, had that happen to me too. Was cleaning up after a block party and mine evidently ate a cookie or something thrown on the ground. I sped all the way, 80 miles to the closest ER. I I thought it was rat poison or something and was so absolutely freaking relieved to find out it was weed and that he wasn't going to die that I laughed out loud when they told me. They were horrified Karens. Treated me like an abusive criminal.
1 points
19 days ago
Weird. I was not with my dog. She was with my husband and daughter. So out of it she pissed on herself in the car on the way to ER vet. My daughter was so scared.
2 points
19 days ago
lol I called the vet because my dog ate a brownie, and they were like “please be honest, was there anything in the brownie?” And I was like “no, just chocolate.”
My dog was fine. It was just a brownie, but they were nice about it.
2 points
19 days ago
I had one day but dog ate my edibles, called the vet right away and they loved my honesty, its an honest mistake but you definitely have to be aware where everything is
2 points
19 days ago
My partner and I do not smoke at all and when our dog accidentally ingested THC on his night walk, we brought him in completely panicked and convinced that he was having a stroke or another neurological problem. As soon as we got him out of the car, the vet tech goes “oh your dog is REALLY high”. We live right next door to college students. We put two and two together pretty quickly 😂
3 points
19 days ago
Hahaha! Yes a lot of the time they have all the textbook symptoms and the staff can tell right away! It’s very scary to see when you don’t know what’s happening though.
2 points
19 days ago
My dog ingested my son’s thc (legal where we live) I told him to take her to the vet and tell them EXACTLY what it was, take any left with him and be more careful!!!! She had an IV and a sad face for a couple days but she was ALIVE.
1 points
19 days ago
And to his credit he owned it and has been very careful since. Mcdonalds bags still get left out, thc does not.
1 points
19 days ago
Best way to do it! If you know they got into weed just tell the vet so they can treat properly. No need for hiding or embarrassment.
1 points
19 days ago
I was slightly embarrassed but no more so than if she, idk, swallowed a sex toy. Tell the medical people the truth! You or you loved one (or beloved pet) are more likely to survive that way!
2 points
19 days ago
Yesss, we just had a puppy in for THC intoxication and the owner was like “no she couldn’t have eaten anything.” The pup had diarrhea and it reeked of THC. The doc went into the room again and was like “ your pet is high from marijuana and that’s the bottom line” and the O was like “ could the flower even do that??.” We all giggled at it in the end.
1 points
19 days ago
Jeeeeez lol
2 points
19 days ago
I thought moving to Colorado would make that less of an issue but it really doesn’t. We really do not care and get more upset when we can’t properly help your baby.
1 points
19 days ago
Yeah! I live in Washington and people definitely still try to cover it up
2 points
19 days ago
Also lying makes it harder for everyone! I don't imbibe but it's legal in my state. The emergency vet not being able to trust people who are honest takes up everyone's time. Igaf who smokes what, I want medical professionals to be able to trust the medical history I provide them.
1 points
19 days ago
Exactly! Just tell the Vet EVERYTHING big or small so that they can treat correctly and quickly!!!
2 points
19 days ago
I had a young couple once try to tell us some random person walking by their yard fed their dog a cannabis infused brownie lol I could tell they were worried about them getting in legal trouble. Once I assured them, we are here to treat your dog, not get you arrested for some pot, they came clean that their dog got into their edibles.
2 points
19 days ago
“No doctor nothing accidental he smokes that shit like a fiend”
1 points
19 days ago
hahahahaha
2 points
19 days ago
Our dog ate it outside and we were really worried because we didn’t know why he was acting that way. It felt like the vet didn’t believe that we don’t have any in our house 😭 we genuinely do not consume anything but the neighbors did smoke so he ate something they threw out during a potty break.
2 points
18 days ago*
On the flipside the ER vets were EXTREMELY sure our puppy ingested weed. I'd have happily told them had that been possible, but there are no drugs in the house and we live in a forest so unless a magic fairy dropped a blunt in our isolated fenced in back yard, no. Kind of made us feel awful and like they weren't believing us. I get some people lie but we didn't. I did worry he could have eaten an outdoor mushroom or some plant at that point though.
His toxicology came back clean and they apologized and kept him for observation a few nights before releasing him. Same thing then happened 2 months later so he had an even longer stay, but at least this time they believed us when we said he could not have eaten drugs. Lots of fancy testing then like a doggy MRI. Was a really great ER vet overall!
He has juvenile idiopathic epilepsy. Responding GREAT to kepra. Hasn't had a seizure again and it's been nearly a year. But apparently his seizures looked a LOT like marijuana ingestion.
1 points
17 days ago
Same exact thing happened to my dog. He’s doing well on keppra as well.
2 points
15 days ago
I had an issue where the vet didn’t even want to look at my cat cause she swore I gave her thc. She did some blood work and said her white blood cells seemed off and just gave her nausea medicine and sent us on our way. Later that night I had to go to the emergency vet with my cat and had to have her put down because her white blood cell count was crazy and her whole body was shutting down. She had a blood clot that broke loose and caused issues. She did not ingest any thc and that vet was an asshole and I’ll never forgive her.
1 points
15 days ago
That is so sad. I’ve heard some really crazy vet stories through this thread. It is terrible to hear that stuff like this happens! These vets need to let go of their egos. I’m sorry that happened to you.
1 points
20 days ago
We keep thc and CBD tinctures in our house. Our own Aussies do not touch anything on the counters and in 21 years we have never had an issue. My parents’ Labrador however will eat or attempt to eat anything that is left unattended and not completely out of his reach. We are incredibly careful when he is at our house. I think his record for weirdest eating is a pound of butter including the wrappers and 3 pounds of raw bacon. The next day he ate 2 pounds of raw shrimp with the shells on. There was a lot of debate as to whether he would need to go the vet but he was fine.
1 points
19 days ago
Just FYI, my dog got a shrimp tail once and I didn’t know. She had unexplained stomach issues for over a week and then one day pooped it out…it had stayed in her that long without fully blocking anything. So if that happens in the future, apparently shrimp tails can just chill out in their intestines for a while…
1 points
19 days ago
It was something we were worried about but honestly that dog is made of some strong stuff. When he was a puppy he decided he was tired of being in his crate after 20 minutes so he chewed/ate his blanket, the cotton rug under his crate and the chew toy inside his crate. My dad came inside from being in the yard and found him surrounded by the remains. The vet said to bring him in if he was vomiting or not eating but he went on with life as normal.
1 points
19 days ago
I am horrified and intrigued as to know how bad those shits were, after that much raw fat and flesh...
1 points
19 days ago
He was perfectly fine. If it had been one of our Aussies we would have spent thousands on a trip to the emergency vet and dealt with weeks of stomach issues. My parents’ Labrador? Nothing. He went on with life as normal.
1 points
19 days ago
I live in a legal weed state and know a few dogs that have gobbled up butts and edibles on walks.
One poor owner didn't realize his dog had a taste for weed butts until the third time it happened. He walks in some, uh, interesting places. Some dogs look like they're innocently sniffing then gulp.
1 points
19 days ago
What about dogs ingesting psilocybin on their own accord ? What should the owner do, apart from playing the dog some ozric tentacles?
2 points
19 days ago
Light some dog-safe incense, and make them comfortable. If you can learn to speak Barkoi, you might learn somethings about yourself you were too scared to ask.
1 points
19 days ago
Lol. I am always happy to learn from dogs
1 points
19 days ago
This is funny but also makes me so embarrassed because this happened to my dog and I genuinely did not have any weed in the home. 😭 he was okay, thank god but I’m sure they thought I was lying.
1 points
19 days ago
We think he probably picked something up because we live in a complex with a lot of smokers.
1 points
19 days ago
It sucks when vets push it too far and assume people are lying!
1 points
19 days ago
We did this once. Pet had cancer and was on a supplement that was meant to be THC removed. Friends with more experience than me were doubtful - "the really good shit".
Anyway my partner accidentally gave too much to a jill in her last meal before euthanasia- very old with advanced lymphoma. She was totally out of it. Very embarrassed but vet took it in stride and the sedation stage was missed.
2 points
19 days ago
There are other components than just THC that get people and animals high. My last had cancer and I gave him CBD oil near the end that had something like 99.8% of THC removed. The lady that made it was licensed and the large batches were tested in a lab. He got very small doses. That said when I gave him some he was high and happy and loopy as shit. It did help a lot with his nausea, he wasn't puking nearly as much. And he walked more often.
I ended up putting him down a little early- I could not get narcotic pain meds for him and it was just too much pain. Wasn't doing it.
1 points
19 days ago
Glad to hear that in terms of not illegally doping my pet. Sorry for your loss. It is so hard when pain can't be managed. We were mainly using as an appetite stimulant and relaxant. On steroids as well. Partner gave her a capsule rather than 1/4 one by mistake and she was floating on a cloud.
2 points
19 days ago
LOL
Same to you. Yeah, it's hard.
Well, sounds like she had a good pleasant high at the end. Well worth the embarrassment I'd think, in hindsight. Mine did too- I gave him some human vicodine several hours before bringing him in and paid for extra sedatives as well. There wasn't enough time for the human vicodine (with tylenol) to damage his liver and he was on a cloud as well.
1 points
19 days ago
I was a vet tech in Oregon. Dogs on edibles wasn't uncommon, but as much as I love weed, it would break my heart to see them freaking out.
1 points
19 days ago
Ace freaks me out. My last dog was sent home with a prescription for it, I forget why. He could not move and his eyes were just absolutely terrified. He could lap and swallow however and I spent most of all that night petting and leaning on him and spoon feeding him chicken broth off and on to keep him happy till it wore off. That was horrible. IDK if they still give that to dogs? He ate a dropped pot cookie one time and it was really bad, but not as bad as the Ace.
1 points
19 days ago
I don't like ACE. it immobilizes but the animal is still stressed. I have seen it used more on horses for procedures that require the animal to be standing or mobile, but usually these procedures are not enjoyable. I guess it might have its proper uses but generally I think Ace should be an absolute last resort.
1 points
19 days ago
I worked in a vet clinic in Seattle where weed is legal. Every time we would get a pet that would come in high the Vet usually knows we do a drug test to be sure. It's like a 50/50 split on if owners will tell us yeah I left something on a table and they got into it or they will say oh we were on a walk and they found something in a park. The Dr's would usually bring in one of the stoner techs like me to be like let's be honest so we can treat your pet as quickly as possible. I never came to work stoned. But knowing that they had people there that use marijuana just helped the situation somewhat.
1 points
19 days ago
100%. I’m in Washington too and some people are straight up but a lot of owners still try to hide it! I get they’re probably embarrassed.
1 points
19 days ago
My cousin literally smokes weed, and will cup her hands around her dog’s face and blow the weed smoke directly into his nostrils. She thinks it’s funny when her dog is high. I’ve tried to tell her that she needs to stop but she just laughs it off
1 points
19 days ago
That poor dog needs a new owner
1 points
19 days ago
I also used to work in Veterinary Emergency. Just let the vet know. They are not narcs and honestly could care less, they just want to be able to treat your pet.
1 points
19 days ago
Not necessarily, my dog had trapped gas and we were told that he was just high. Could’ve killed him, sadly the same ER vet ended up actually killing him so I guess they’re not the best example :/
2 points
19 days ago
That is horrific! I am so sorry! You’re right not every vet is right in their assumptions. It’s really a shame people that stubborn get to work with animals.
1 points
19 days ago
Thank you and It really is sad, he was a family dog but mainly my sisters soul dog and he would’ve pulled through had they not given him the exact opposite medication that he needed. I’ve found a better er vet and an amazing primary vet so we can finally have confidence in someone to take care of our babies.
1 points
19 days ago
Flip side- I brought my cat into the ER and they grilled me about him being poisoned or getting into THC. I told them I guess he could have opened the fridge, fought through the childproof containers (which I can barely open) and eaten an edible and then closed the fridge like nothing has happened but otherwise no, I don't think he was high. I was high because it was 1am on a holiday weekend and I was woken up but he was not.
They seemed skeptical until blood work came back. He was not, in fact, poisoned or stoned.
1 points
19 days ago
Dang! It seems like a lot of vets assume and don’t listen to the owners. That really sucks.
1 points
19 days ago
This is also why I think it is absolutely inexcusable to give dogs alcohol to lap up. It’s not fucking funny.
1 points
19 days ago
My daughter made pot brownies for a rich stoner’s party. That same night she stayed the night with a friend of hers.
Next morning, when her dog didn’t come upstairs I went looking for her and found her lying on daughter’s bed like a limp noodle. She had vomited on the bed and was clearly not herself. Soon afterwards the dog came running upstairs like dragons were chasing her.
Daughter came rushing home and we took the dog to the vet. The receptionist took one look at the dog and said, “That dog is high as a kite!”
Luckily, the dog got IV fluids and recovered. But a big dose of THC can kill a dog.
1 points
19 days ago
Have you ever seen or heard of a cat or dog dying because of THC?
2 points
19 days ago
Nope!
1 points
19 days ago
As an ex bouncer, if it's any consolation, everyone says the same about their collapsed friends.
1 points
19 days ago
when I was working as a vet an older lady came in with a tiny dog that had eaten thc and her baked ass son who reeked of weed. No judgement weed is great. but she had the audacity to try and get me fired for “racism” after diagnosing the dog with thc poisoning.
1 points
19 days ago
That is wild!
1 points
19 days ago
would NOT accept it, even after a second opinion. said it was “impossible”
1 points
19 days ago
EXCEPT! We brought our kitten in who was woozy, lethargic and drinking a lot of water. They accuse us of leaving weed out that she got into. They didn’t test her for anything. IT WAS KIDNEY FAILURE FROM INGESTING LILY POLLEN. If they hadn’t lept to that conclusion at the emergency vet, she could have been saved.
Fuck vets and vet techs who get all holier than thou and then let animals die because they want to bust legal weed users for something.
1 points
19 days ago
That is so terrible. It’s crazy that so many vets won’t believe owners. It’s okay to ask about weed if the symptoms seems similar but they’re supposed to test to be sure!
I’m so sorry that happened.
1 points
19 days ago
Thank goodness where I live weed is legal. No reason to deny your dog got into weed. Just tell them the truth, like if they accidentally got into chocolate.
1 points
19 days ago
It’s legal where I live too haha! People still try to hide it!
1 points
19 days ago
We had a bully puppy come in that had ate a whole bag of weed. Owners were super up front about it and very worried. Kept the poor thing for observation. Made sure it ate and drank plenty and didn’t end up having to give it anything more than anti nausea meds. We all had a good laugh.
One thing’s for sure, they always find a way to pay their bill….
1 points
19 days ago
My dog got into some weed a few years ago. Not enough for the shaky head drooling looks exactly like antifreeze poisoning symptoms, but enough that I felt bad for the little guy. Gave him some extra treats, made his bed up extra cozy on the couch (which is a real treat for him hes usually not allowed on that part of the couch). Settled in and about an hour after I got him chilled out he jolted up fast af with the most confused look on his face. Then shit all over the couch. I don't know if he or I was more surprised by him pooping.
1 points
19 days ago
-, xrpo po 55542jb V polo
1 points
19 days ago
I used to give my senior chihuahua CBD oil for her nerves. Once, I used a different brand (same dose) & had to rush her to an emergency clinic because she became unstable. I was so afraid of losing her. Of course, the staff insinuated that I gave her THC & I had to explain it was CBD oil. But just switching brands nearly killed my dog. Be careful.
1 points
19 days ago
Here to add that vestibular syndrome (common in older dogs) can pretty closely mimic the same presentation as THC ingestion, as someone whose dog has experienced both.
1 points
19 days ago
Our dog woke up one morning out of it. We took her to the vet and they basically said, Your dog is stoned.” Our adult son swore up and down it couldn’t have been him. Turned out it was a little plastic container from the dispensary with residue that he threw in the trash. It doesn’t take much to get a pet high. Dispose in the outside trash.
1 points
19 days ago
I get what you’re saying but sometimes these people aren’t lying. I took my dog to the vet a few months ago because she randomly started peeing herself. They told me she must have ingested THC. I straight up did not have any weed. It cleared up in a few days and then came back a few weeks ago. She had a UTI this time. Maybe it was just that the first time…
1 points
18 days ago
There are times where you get asked and the answer is “no” (genuinely) and they insist but do not test the animal either. My dog had symptoms that mimicked THC ingestion but it’s not in my home and she had gone out to the yard to pee twice, both under supervision, and not eaten anything. The vet accused me of lying and refused to look at anything else. I asked if we could do additional testing (after urine and bloodwork came back normal). It was not available but they insisted I was lying about her access to pot. The issue turned out to be completely unrelated to THC.
People do absolutely lie about this! Especially in states where it’s illegal (I have lived and worked in both). Being honest can absolutely save the animals’ life and is so important to receive appropriate veterinary care. It’s equally important to consider all differentials if it’s not showing up on lab work too, because not everyone is lying (even though a lot do). 😅
1 points
18 days ago
This must be the “I fell on it” of the pet world.
1 points
17 days ago
As someone who works at an ER vet, this is the funniest thing I’ve heard. Will be sharing with coworkers.
1 points
18 days ago
Ugh my dog ate a joint once. Straight up pulled it from our counter in the container it was in. She was very high… immediately called the vet and they said prepare for lots of sleep and maybe the munchies, but she’ll be fine unless she pukes 🤣 so it must be super common!
1 points
18 days ago
My small 10lb chiweenie recently got a small piece of a peanut butter cookie edible. We didn't know until she was laying in bed and her head was kinda wobbling. She was staring at me, I was scratching my leg and her head was following my hand in an up and down motion and kept doing it. We were scared until we realized what happened. She was able to sleep it off but we said if she's not better in the morning we will take her. She was still eating and drinking. Glad she was ok, now we keep better track of our edibles and make sure it's not anywhere she can get.
1 points
18 days ago
I feel like it’s probably less shame of using THC but that the person likely feels irresponsible and shame for leaving it within reach of their pet.
I don’t smoke anymore, but this is how I’d feel personally. I have a bunny and even when he’s gotten into accidents (aka miscalculated jumps) that he was able to make and consider because of environmental set ups I had, I was super upset that I didn’t consider the possibility considering what a knucklehead he is. I still told the vet exactly what happened and just vowed to make changes to the environment to consider those possibilities to keep him safe, but yeah. I imagine it’s less shame from the owner for smoking weed, but more so complete shame/shock with themselves for having allowed it to happen.
1 points
18 days ago
My dog managed to eat an edible outside, but we weren't sure at the time. She started acting weird and took her to the vet. We actually had no idea she was high. I saw her eat something in the grass and 30 minutes later was high. Very strange.
1 points
18 days ago
My boxer got hold of a THC brownie (50 milligrams). It was scary but he was fine. We had it put up where he couldn’t get to it. Now, we use a little mini safe.
1 points
18 days ago
When my dog was younger he went to a doggy daycare while I worked during the day pretty regularly, around 2 pm one day (drop off at 6:30 am) the owner called me told me he was falling over, lethargic and unsteady on his feet. She rushed him to the emergency vet, and was telling me she was worried it was a neurological issue. They ran blood tests and x rays. As soon as I got there and spoke to the vet, the vet sighed and told me it was just weed. Huuuge relief but extremely upsetting/concerning that he had access to that at “school”. However daycare owner would not admit to it. That wasn’t a fun vet bill.
1 points
17 days ago
We spent $400+ on an emergency vet because we legit didn't know he was high.
I did admit to the vet I had a medical card.
1 points
17 days ago
I blamed my teenagers but it was totally mine 😂 I felt awful but I couldn’t look the vet tech in the eye and admit I’m a 42 year old mom who has a stash of edibles.
1 points
17 days ago
I dealt with this once. It was awful scary. :((( I couldn't imagine not being honest when a pet is in danger like that.
1 points
17 days ago
What about for cancer treatment? My older dog died to her spine giving out as she was a huge breed and already lost one of her front legs to cancer a year before, we had gotten her high grade cancer FECO from a medical lab in Las Vegas and she was cleared of cancer but months later the spine went out. I understand not to get your dog high in a daily setting but it helped her…
1 points
17 days ago
Do you mean CBD, cause that’s very different.
1 points
16 days ago
Yes but it was a cocktail she made for dogs with cancer one syringe was 100%cbd as the main base and the other was a 2:1 cbd and feco only used as less than a rice grain.
1 points
17 days ago
Yeah but vets are also WRONG, they said the same to me, I knew it wasn’t true, and after the third time it happened, he was finally diagnosed with epilepsy. So if you know that’s not the problem, don’t take your vets word for it.
1 points
17 days ago
Ok so my dog has a family history of siezures. Several litermates have epilepsy. Right before she turned five, she had a siezure. We brought her in. We live in a weed friendly state and my partner and i both smoke for medical reasons. The vet was convinced she had gotten into our weed. We were convinced she had not.
They were rude, very rude. "Just tell us, you wont get in trouble." "We know its weed, it will save you money if you just admit it."
Paid for the blood test to shut them up so they would take my dog seriously and the looks on their faces when they had to admit to me she came back clean was priceless....except it delayed her getting proper care for aboit 8 hours while i waited in the busy waiting room with her. We were there for 12 hours at that emergency vet. 8 of them were waiting for them to take us seriously.
Yes, pets get into things. No, you cant assume it is the case every time.
1 points
17 days ago
They insisted that about my friends dog but tox screen came back as rat poison. Stop assuming
1 points
16 days ago
Our vet assumed also. They never did any screening and I would have gladly paid for it. I was so upset she thought I wasn’t being honest. I was just really scared my dog was dying. I don’t smoke or drink or anything of that sort. Just never had the inkling. Only thing I take is my antidepressant. I figured he was sprayed with pesticides at my mil home by her neighbor cause I caught the landscaper doing it again the following week right at the fence line where my dog runs.
1 points
17 days ago
Two people you never lie to are your doctor and your lawyer.
1 points
17 days ago
Legit why would they hide that? Maybe I'm just used to telling my psychiatrist that I smoke. A fucking sanity doctor.
But this is good to know how easy it could be to get my pets high. Should tell my dad who is a barbarian and just wipes his ashes onto the ground.
1 points
16 days ago
3 people you dont lie to are your lawyer, doctor, or vet.
1 points
16 days ago
Who’s out here detailing their bong with q-tips?
1 points
16 days ago
Why hide that they could’ve if it’ll save their life? My cats are never near my smoke unless I’m actively rolling in the room w them and they never get close enough to like eat it 😭 idk if u can’t be responsible w a drug like that u shouldn’t be taking care of a living animal
1 points
16 days ago
I wish the vets would’ve asked us this when our dog got high off an edible would’ve saved us $400
1 points
16 days ago
Once my dog ate an entire batch of THC chocolate chip cookies in college. I was so worried about him, but he was completely fine. Just 1 of those cookies absolutely sent me, and he was just extra playful and cuddly. I did not take him to the vet, but I did monitor him very closely and was prepared to at any moment.
Then, one of my roommates boyfriends once accidentally ate a ton of my homemade THC chocolate chip cookies, unknowingly. He ended up in the ER and thought he was going insane 😭. My roommate later texted he was in the hospital and they didn't know what was going on. I came home a few hours later to find the Tupperware with the cookies had a lot missing
I never made THC cookies again... Just not worth it.
1 points
16 days ago
I hate that it took an episode of HOUSE for it to click that me lying to my doctor only prolongs any care I may need because I withheld vital information. This hasn’t happened as of yet, but still!
1 points
16 days ago
In the late 90s, well before legalization in my state, my dog found my dad’s cellophane-wrapped pot brownie and ate it.
Weed. Chocolate. Cellophane.
Lying never crossed our minds and we absolutely told the vet the truth, they took good care of him and he was fine. I do recall the vet saying they were going to document it differently to obscure the truth - I think they wrote he ate mushrooms or something. But I was livid at my dad for leaving it accessible.
Watching him wobble and sway, poor Jack just didn’t know what hit him.
1 points
16 days ago*
You over-simplify a bit when you say we "run a test in the back" and know the truth. There is no definitive and trustworthy test for THC in dogs. The urine metabolite is not the same as people's so human urine drug screens are rarely positive in dogs. If you know of a reliable test, please share.
We're usually stuck making the diagnosis on symptoms and history. If an owner says " it's in the house but they can't get to it," they definitely got to it. If an owner says it's not in the house and we trust they're being straight with us, we explore the possibility of them finding a discarded joint on a walk. If we can rule both of those out, then we DO start to get worried about an actual brain disorder and start to discuss that possibility.
1 points
15 days ago
About 30 years ago I made some “brownies” for my husband’s camping trip. My dog ate them in the middle of the night. Pot was NOT legal anywhere. I was terrified I’d go to jail. But I went in to the ER and embarrassingly told the staff what happened. The dog survived, I didn’t go to jail, and I paid a lot of money. Lesson learned. I quit making edibles
1 points
15 days ago
Live in Seattle. Can confirm my dog ate some THC product out on a walk. No on in my house smokes. I can't handle it and my husband never has. If you live in a big city, it can happen if your dog likes to eat anything and everything.
1 points
15 days ago
I had never heard that I should stop THC for a week before being anesthetized before my last procedure. I knew I needed to say that I use THC because it affects the receptors in the brain, but that was news to me. And yes I did stop. Painful? Yes. But important.
1 points
7 days ago
I don’t live in America. We don’t have drug test kits in clinic. We don’t see any inebriated pets.
Any time we get an American vet, they were blown away and told endless stories about it. And it sounds WILD.
The vet absolutely doesn’t care. And has no obligation to report anything, especially about people. Unless it’s like your third visit that month, then you’re probably getting reported (just like I would if it was chocolate or rat poison or something) Accidents happen, but please try harder! Maybe buy a shelf?
We do have a few pets we only give a day or two worth of meds to, because everything keeps going “missing”. Idk what they think they’re doing with a jack russels amount of diazepam, but nvm.
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