Beyond the Price Tag: Vet. Trends

Your Dog Ate Christmas: Vet CSR Triage Scripts (Holiday Edition)


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by the creators of @thevetcsr— built to be front-desk practical, holiday-relevant, and actually entertaining (not beige corporate oatmeal).

I create this content for free, because true industry experts have a duty. I could charge you, but nah. We’re not doing that. We’re professionals.

💅 show notes (free)

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20-Min Saturday Special (Full Recording Script + Time Stamps)

— Cold Open

“Hi besties. If you’re listening to this on a Saturday, congratulations — you are either at work, recovering from work, or emotionally dissociating in a parking lot with a drive-thru coffee. Today’s episode is a *holiday triage speed-run* for vet receptionists and CSRs, because December is the month where pets try to eat the décor and clients try to eat your soul.”
— Intro / Identity
“Welcome back to The Veterinary Receptionist Podcast™— I’m Em, your front-desk gremlin guardian angel. This is the Saturday Special: short, tactical, and designed to make Monday less of a dumpster fire. If you handle phones, scheduling, estimates, angry humans, and panicked pet parents — you’re exactly who this is for.”

Disclaimer (protective but not boring)

“Quick note: this podcast is education, not a diagnosis. If a pet is in distress — trouble breathing, collapse, uncontrolled vomiting, seizures — treat it as an emergency and follow your clinic protocol. Cool? Cool.”

gaslit- Em Ridyard Music

Segment: The December Emergency Hit List (what you’ll hear nonstop)
“Alright. Let’s name the usual suspects — the ‘Holiday Greatest Hits’ calls:
1. Chocolate— especially dark chocolate.
2. Xylitol— sugar-free gum, mints, baked goods.
3. Grapes/Raisins/Currants— ‘but it was just one…’ famous last words.
4. Tinsel / ribbon / string / linear foreign bodies— cats go *feral* for this.
5. Cooked bones— splinters, obstruction, constipation.
6. Alcohol / weed edibles— ‘he got into the brownies’ oh my god.
7. Medications— Tylenol/ibuprofen, ADHD meds, antidepressants,and benzodiazepines.
8. Ornaments / hooks / glass— lacerations and swallowed sharp objects.
9. Lilies— catastrophic for cats (if you’re in a clinic, you already know the panic tone).

And here’s the truth: the caller usually doesn’t know what matters. They’ll tell you what brand the chocolate is, what their aunt’s cousin thinks, and a full timeline of their divorce… but not the pet’s weight, amount eaten,and time since ingestion— which is what we need.”
Em Ridyard music 🎶
Segment 2: The Triage Framework (what to ask every time)
“Here’s a clean, consistent framework you can use on *any* ingestion call. I call it:

W.A.I.T.

W= Weight (species, breed, approx weight)
A= Amount (how much, what form, what concentration)
I= Interval (when did it happen — minutes/hours)
T= Trouble signs (vomiting, lethargy, tremors, collapse, trouble breathing)

Now I’m going to give you scripts-you can literally read. Because the point isn’t to sound clever — it’s to sound calm and get accurate info fast.”

Script: Universal Ingestion Call (copy/paste)
It’s In The show notes if you forget

“Okay — I can help. I’m going to ask a few quick questions so we can triage this safely.”

1. “Is your pet breathing normally and able to stand?”
2. “Dog or cat? Approx weight?”
3. “What exactly was eaten — and about how much?”
4. “When did it happen?”
5. “Any symptoms right now: vomiting, shaking, weakness, diarrhea?”
6. “Do you have the packaging? If yes, can you read me the ingredients?”

Then:
“Thank you. Based on what you’ve told me, we need to [come in now / same-day appointment / monitor at home with warning signs]. If anything changes — vomiting, tremors, weakness, breathing issues — that becomes emergency.”

The magic phrase when callers won’t answer

“I hear you — I just need these two details to keep your pet safe: their weight and roughly how much was eaten.”

The boundary phrase when they demand guarantees

“ I can’t guarantee outcomes over the phone, but I can make sure you get the safest next step.”

The “stop arguing with me” phrase

“Totally understand. I’m going to follow medical triage protocol here because it’s the safest approach.”

Segment 3: Holiday-Specific Mini Scripts (the calls you’ll get today)

A) Chocolate

Caller:”He ate chocolate!”
You: “Okay — what kind: milk, dark, baking chocolate? How much, and what’s your dog’s weight? When was it?”

If they’re vague:
“Even a rough guess helps — a few squares, half a bar, the whole bar?”

B) Xylitol (urgent vibe)

“Does the packaging say xylitol, birch sugar, or sugar alcohol?
If yes:
“Okay, this is time-sensitive — we need to see your pet immediately. Please don’t wait for symptoms.”

C.) Tinsel / string / ribbon (cats especially)

“Do not pull anything that’s hanging out of the mouth or rectum — that can cause serious injury. We need to see them.”

(That line alone saves lives and lawsuits.)

D) Bones

“Cooked bones can splinter and cause obstruction or constipation. If there’s repeated vomiting, straining, abdominal pain, or not eating — that’s urgent.”

E) Alcohol / Edibles

“I’m not here to judge — I just need the truth so we can treat safely. What was it, and approximately how much?”
(You’ll be amazed how honesty appears when you remove shame.)

F) Human meds

“If there’s any chance your pet ate human medication — especially pain meds, ADHD meds, antidepressants — we treat that as urgent.”


Segment 4: The Front Desk Survival Bit (how to stay calm while chaos screams)

“Now for my favourite part: protecting your nervous system, because you can’t help anyone if you’re internally on fire.

Three rules:

1. Slow is smooth. Smooth is fast.
You’re not slow — you’re controlled.
2. Use the same script every time.
Scripts are not robotic…they’re reliable.
3. Don’t let panic dictate your tone. Your calm voice becomes the caller’s borrowed brain.

Also, here’s your reminder: you are not a punching bag with a headset. You are a trained professional doing risk management with a keyboard.

Outro

Holiday Triage Call Sheet you can keep at the desk.

📩 Send me:

* your worst holiday call,
* a question you want answered on-air, or
* a script you want me to rewrite for your clinic
to [[email protected]]

“See you next time, and please… for the love of all that is holy — keep the tinsel away from the f* king cats.”

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Beyond the Price Tag: Vet. TrendsBy The Veterinary Receptionist