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How to avoid huge vet bills and keep your pets healthy

Vet Gareth Steel offers advice on how to keep your pet out of the surgery

Anyone who has ever had to take their pet to the vet’s – whether for vaccinations, minor injuries or major surgery – will know that, unless you have insurance, it can mean a huge dent in your pocket.

Some people simply cannot afford the hundreds or thousands of pounds it costs to keep a pet healthy and it’s something Gareth Steel has had to contemplate during his 20 years as a practising vet.

“Two words of advice for pet owners: get insurance,” Steel advises in his new memoir, Never Work With Animals, about his life as a vet. The best care is very expensive, he warns. “The problem with veterinary medicine is that pets are worth – prepare for a shock – what we think they are.”

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He’s been confronted with both extremes. Having to put a dog to sleep because the owner couldn’t afford the £70 for necessary treatment. And throwing £500 of treatment at a severely ill rabbit with a minuscule chance of survival who, as expected, didn’t make it – but the owners had been adamant they wanted to try everything.

Veterinary medicine has come on leaps and bounds, he agrees, but MRI scans, joint replacements, spinal, heart and brain surgery all costs money in research, materials, time and education.

He offers the following advice to prospective and new pet owners who want to keep their vet visits to a minimum.

Carefully select your pet

“Rather than looking at the appearance of the animal, look at the lifestyle of the animal. For example, if you compare a sighthound like a lurcher with a border collie, sighthounds will sleep for the vast majority of the day, then you take them to the beach and they will run around like lunatics and will sleep for the rest of the day. They don’t have a lot of intellectual demands.

“Border collies need a lot of exercise but they need a lot of intellectual stimuli as well. You have to consider what the animal requires to be happy.”

“Some people have animals like terrapins or exotics in tiny enclosures which can’t be healthy for them,” he continues. “You need to look at the size of enclosure they need and if you can realistically provide it for them.”

Avoid certain breeds

“French bulldogs are incredibly popular but they have enormous health problems and the same with British bulldogs. A lot of these animals suffer rates of ill health that are astronomically higher than, for example, a Heinz 57 mixed breed,” Steel advises.

Buy a book on welfare before you buy a pet

“Either get a good book or approach the RSPCA, which has fact sheets on the most common pets, to get an appreciation of the basic care needed for these animals. Understand if you can provide it and seek to provide it once you understand it. Engage with your local vet, who will offer advice.”

Cats might be higher maintenance than you think

Cats sitting next to a dog (Alamy/PA)

“Cats tend to be happy in their own company for fairly long periods of time. They are often quite happy being solo. That said, if you have a lot of cats in a household, that can cause stress because cats like their own space, they like to have options. If they are forced into sharing territory with another cat they don’t get on with, that will cause problems. It can lead to behavioural problems and urinary tract disorders.”

Beware of your choice of pets for children

A parrot in a cage (Alamy/PA)

“Getting small furry animals or exotics for kids is not a great idea. They are often not great pets because they don’t necessarily like to be stroked or handled. They also have quite complicated needs. For example, rabbits need to be regularly cleaned out, they need to be a bonded pair if possible, they need space and a correct diet.

“The big thing with kids is the education. If the child says ‘I want a parrot’, find a good documentary to show them the natural habitat of a parrot – in the jungle with plenty of space, interacting with other parrots and being intellectually stimulated.”

Seek help early

“If your pet is unwell, engage with your vet early. For example, we see bad ears a lot. Often when the animal comes in, the owner has tried various concoctions they’ve bought online as a cost-saving strategy. When you talk to them, they’ve often spent around £100 on various things that are totally unsuitable. It’s a false economy – because the vet consultation and correct treatment may cost less than that.”

Get your pet vaccinated

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“Diseases are often viral, we don’t have great treatments for them and the fatality rate is often high. For example, a routine set of vaccinations for your puppy will probably cost between £60 and £100. Treating your puppy for parvovirus will probably cost no less than £1,000.”

If you are getting insurance, he advises:

Read the small print. “Some insurance schemes are limited by the total amount they will pay out in a year. Others are limited by disease, paying out a certain amount per condition per year.”

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Double check exclusions. “Your insurance might be cheap, but some providers will exclude a condition after a year. So, say your animal gets diabetes, at the end of the year you will no longer be covered. Get a policy that covers your animal throughout life,” he advises.

Be realistic. “Sit down and work out what you realistically want for your pet. Say, for instance, it had a spinal issue, would you want to be able to offer that animal surgery? If so you’ll need between £5,000 and £7,000 cover. That immediately rules out a lot of options.”

Book jacket of Never Work With Animals by Gareth Steel (HarperElement/PA)

Never Work With Animals by Gareth Steel. Available now.

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