The ability of the veterinarian to effectively communicate with pet owners is a critical component of determining a correct diagnosis and providing appropriate medical care. The process of obtaining a thorough medical history is one you will perfect over time.
Assuring your approach covers all the pertinent information, and recognizing when to take a particular path with your questions, is an art form all of its own.
Just as in social situations, exam room conversations can sometimes yield unexpected responses. How you react in these blooper moments can potentially destroy the trust and rapport you have worked to establish with your client. Can you ever really be ready for the unexpected? Probably not, but it is safe to assume that a snarky remark, or unbridled laughter would never be appropriate.
The conversation steams ahead predictably. You learn the cats are inside only, both are eating and drinking fine, there has been no change in environment, eliminations have been normal, and the clients have had the cats since they were kittens.
You ask the next logical question, “Are the cats littermates?” The Spouse quickly responds, “Yes, they use the same litter box.” (The Spouse is dead serious.)
Answer: c
Though it will make a great story later, now is the time to stifle your snicker and keep the focus on the felines. Client X will smile gratefully at your discretion, The Spouse will be glad to have had the opportunity to provide useful information, and you will have preserved a valuable relationship.