Caring for a pet with cancer requires the owner and the veterinary team to work closely together. Owners play a crucial role in daily care and decision-making.
What Is Supportive Care?
All pets undergoing cancer treatment need supportive care, which includes giving medications, recognizing and treating signs of pain, and ensuring proper nutrition.
How Do Pets Get Their Medication?
Cancer treatments often involve administering medications to kill cancer cells or manage pain. Some medications are given at the vet’s office, and others are given at home, depending on the specific treatment plan for cancer. Owners whose pets are being treated for cancer should monitor their pets closely and report any unusual responses to medications to their veterinarians.
Do Pets With Cancer Need Special Diets?
Good nutrition is vital for pets with cancer. They may need different types of foods or amounts than healthy pets. If a pet loses its appetite, it can lose weight and become dehydrated. Owners whose pets are being treated for cancer should consult their veterinarian about dietary changes and possible appetite stimulants if necessary.
What Is Comfort Care (Pet Hospice)?
Not all cancers can be cured, and some treatments may cause more pain than relief. In such cases, comfort care focuses on minimizing an animal's pain and providing emotional support to the pet owner. This care allows pets to live comfortably in familiar surroundings while owners prepare for the end.
Owners should work with a veterinarian knowledgeable about comfort care to create a plan that can be adjusted as the pet’s condition changes.
At some point, pet owners may need to consider whether their pet’s quality of life is worth the pain, effort, and expense of ongoing cancer treatment. The focus should always be on improving the pet’s quality of life.
Short-term issues, like pain, can often be managed, but there may come a time when the pet’s suffering outweighs the benefits of treatment. In such cases, euthanasia (when a veterinarian administers medication to humanely end a suffering pet's life) may be the most humane option. Veterinarians can provide pet owners not only with guidelines to help them decide when it is the appropriate time to euthanize their animal, but also with support and advice throughout this difficult emotional process.
