Fitzpatrick Referrals

Behind the scenes at Fitzpatrick Referrals

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Two years ago, I received an email to confirm an EMS placement at a certain well-known veterinary practice in the south of England.

Fitzpatrick Referrals
Fitzpatrick Referrals: arguably one of the most recognisable practice premises in the UK. Image taken from the VBJ Practice Profile.

In my head, the placement remained far off until – three days after one set of exams ended and four weeks before another set – it seemed to sneak up on me far quicker than expected.

Brain slightly frazzled from exams, but orthopaedics (hopefully) fresh in my mind, I found myself pulling into the car park of Fitzpatrick Referrals.

Making sense of things

Being such a large and busy hospital, the first few days were a bit manic, with lots of new faces and protocols to get used to. To be honest, just finding my way back to the staff room was quite a challenge.

As my first time in a referral hospital, there were notable differences from first opinion practice, and the sheer number of surgeries the vets would get through in one day was impressive.

I was able to see a lot of surgery, which helped make sense of the numerous abbreviations our orthopaedic lectures presented, for both the conditions and procedures – an FCP corrected by PUO or the options of TPLO or TTA for CrCLR meant very little until I was able to see the procedures and understand a little more why they helped correct the particular conditions.

(If you’re still wondering: FCP = fractured coronoid process; PUO = proximal ulnar osteotomy; TPLO = tibial plateau levelling osteotomy; TTA = tibial tuberosity advancement; CrCLR = cranial cruciate ligament rupture).

Standard versus innovative

Noel
Noel Fitzpatrick: veterinary visionary? You be the judge.

The above are among many other “standard” referral procedures carried out at other referral orthopaedic hospitals throughout the country. There are, of course (as seen on television), other surgeries Noel carries out. Whether these are considered groundbreaking, experimental or too much is open to interpretation, but they are certainly unique to the “Supervet”.

Noel himself is clearly very passionate and believes wholeheartedly his innovations provide the best options in the world for his patients.

Many other vets would disagree. Many believe he goes too far; that the prolonged recovery and rehabilitation time for heroic procedures are not justified in patients that live in the moment and cannot perceive the future advantages temporary discomfort may bring.

Having been “behind the scenes”, I’m still not sure where I stand on these heroic procedures, but am certain the ethics must be considered on an individual case basis, as is done at Fitzpatrick’s – for example, limb-sparing surgery was decided against in a case of osteosarcoma in which survey chest radiographs showed metastasis.

Camera shy

Undoubtedly, Noel is an extremely clever bloke who has dedicated his life to providing animals with the best orthopaedic technology possible, but his methods will always remain controversial.

The placement was certainly a worthwhile and very different experience. The stationary cameras around the practice were easy to ignore, but observing a surgery that was being filmed, with the surgeon re-explaining the procedure for the third time at a different angle, not so much.

A very definite highlight was scrubbing into a TPLO and being handed the bone drill, to my utter terror and delight at the same time. I’m not sure the novelty of putting a screw into a dog’s leg will ever wear off.


Comments

5 responses to “Behind the scenes at Fitzpatrick Referrals”

  1. Jane RVN Avatar
    Jane RVN

    Great info on EMS.
    Good to know students don’t get star struck! Good to see all ranges of practice. Those who are in courses doing minimal EMS miss out.

  2. I have a very hard time with “anonymous” articles, and underlying tones of judgment. I’m not sure how someone can observe in this practice and still be on the fence about these treatments. I guess this is why visionaries have such a difficult time, as its so much easier and acceptable to stay with the program and never go outside the box. That scares me with doctors and veterinarians – who wants one that does “enough” instead of going all the way? Complaining that something is repeated for the cameras (since the show is a teaching tool) when you could be paying attention to the nuances of each repeated step shows me that your heart really isn’t into learning all you can. Just my opinion, but I’d rather be over taught than not. Your theory about an animal being “in the moment” and unable to understand the outcome of an extended recovery shows that you aren’t looking at the big picture. No one gives a thought to humans doing the same thing, and the result of having a lifelong free of pain is why you do it. Animals deserve the same consideration. I think you’ve done a disservice to all of the staff there, who work their butts off to make life better for animals.

    1. Vet Times Avatar
      Vet Times

      Hi EMT,

      This article wasn’t meant to be anonymous (a technical glitch, rather than an intentional omission), and was actually a blog post by our student vet blogger Jordan Sinclair – and a very positive one, generally. In fact, we feel Jordan successfully highlighted the pros and cons of her limited time within the practice, which she claimed “a worthwhile and very different experience”.

  3. I think he is a genius he deserves a nighthood, you can tell he loves the animals and he loves people too he is a very caring man,so instead of giving accolades to athletes ect,give to someone who is doing something worthwhile.

  4. I’m sorry to be contacting like this, but i’m trying to get an EMS at Fitzpatrick but I haven’t got an ansewer yet. Can Jordan tell me how did she do it and how long it took to get an answer? Thank you

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