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Ruler unit

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AMBER PERRY/APPEN MEDIA Village Animal Hospital has three exam rooms, but owner Riva Wolkow plans to add more and make the existing ones larger.

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comfortable.

No day looks the same at the Village Animal Hospital. That morning, Wolkow was surprised with a drop-off before her first scheduled appointment — a dog who had been vomiting the night before and had bloody diarrhea. Later in the day, she was to perform a biopsy of a mass in one dog’s mouth, “healthy” appointments in between.

“Sometimes you get a euthanasia thrown in,” Wolkow said.

A veterinarians’ days are an emotional rollercoaster. One moment, Wolkow could put a dog down for the deepest kind of sleep — something you do “for a pet” and not “to a pet” — and the next, she could be greeting a new puppy.

Every life stage is important, she said, and it’s important to be there for the clients and their pets.

“We don’t build a wall around our heart, you know, and especially those clients that you’ve had for years and years that you’ve seen as babies, and then they’re 16 years old,” Wolkow said. “I’ve been in long enough to kind of have that whole life stage at this point in my career.”

Growing up with animals, she decided to be a vet at 3 years old. Wolkow never wanted to do anything else.

“I grew up in a family of human doctors and had no desire to do that,” she said. “I’d tease my dad – ‘If I don’t get into vet school, I’ll go to med school as my backup.’”

Now, she has two dogs — Gasper and Peter, who is on his way to be a guide dog. Gasper had the same training but is too terrified of stairs. Wolkow also has two snakes and two sugar gliders.

“[Animals] love unconditionally,” she said. “I would be lost without having dogs.”

As a veterinarian, a major issue Wolkow comes across is the lack of preventative care, especially with cats. Cats are underrepresented, she said. Oftentimes, the beginning stages of sickness in cats are too subtle to be detected. Cats get heartworms just like dogs do, Wolkow said, but for them, there’s no treatment — they’ll just die.

Clients should seek annual, if not bi-annual, exams, she said.

“If people would come in more often for preventative care, we’re going to catch things on bloodwork before they actually get sick,” Wolkow said.

I’m only going to offer you what I would do for my own pet”

RIVA WOLKOW Veternarian/Owner, Village Animal Hospital

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