dvm360 podcast revisits toxic ingestion myths in practice

A new dvm360 Vet Blast Podcast episode is putting a spotlight on a persistent clinical challenge rather than a single breaking development: the misconceptions that shape how pet parents and even some care teams respond to toxic ingestions. In episode 389, published March 3, 2026, Adam Christman, DVM, MBA, speaks with Renee Schmid, DVM, DABT, DABVT, about common toxicology myths, with discussion points including induced vomiting, activated charcoal use, and when hospitalization is warranted. (music.amazon.in)

The topic isn’t new, but it remains highly relevant because poison exposures are still a routine part of small animal practice, and the first decisions made after an ingestion often determine how complicated the case becomes. Schmid has been a visible voice on this issue across veterinary media, and recent AAHA coverage featuring her underscores that seasonal exposures, holiday-related toxins, and shifting household risks continue to drive preventable emergencies. AAHA’s March 16, 2026, guidance notes that veterinary teams benefit when they can anticipate common seasonal toxicities, recognize symptoms earlier, and educate clients before exposures happen. (aaha.org)

The podcast episode itself appears to be positioned as a practical myth-busting conversation for clinicians. According to the episode description, Schmid discusses misconceptions surrounding veterinary toxicology, specifically highlighting questions around when to induce vomiting, the use of activated charcoal, and when hospitalization is necessary. That focus aligns with current poison-control messaging: Pet Poison Helpline says pet parents should not induce vomiting and should not give home antidotes without consulting a veterinarian or toxicology service first. (music.amazon.in)

Broader toxicology data help explain why this kind of refresher matters. On its public site, Pet Poison Helpline says it has managed more than 3 million animal poisoning and exposure cases and maintains access to data on more than 500,000 household and commercial products, medications, and supplements. The ASPCA, meanwhile, said in a 2025 announcement that its poison control service had reached 5 million animal exposure cases since the hotline’s inception in 1978. Those numbers don’t just show scale; they suggest that poison events remain common enough that small errors in triage advice can ripple across a large patient population. (petpoisonhelpline.com)

Schmid’s earlier comments to dvm360 also provide useful context on what clinics are actually seeing. In a January 2024 interview, she said chocolate is typically the most common toxin encountered each year, with xylitol, lilies in cats, ibuprofen, and rodenticides such as bromethalin, cholecalciferol, and anticoagulants also recurring. She also emphasized straightforward prevention steps, including keeping medications out of reach and storing human and veterinary medications separately to reduce accidental administration errors. (dvm360.com)

Why it matters: For veterinary professionals, the real story is operational. Toxic ingestion cases often start with a phone call, a front-desk conversation, or a rushed history from a worried pet parent. If teams aren’t aligned on when emesis is contraindicated, when charcoal has value, or when observation is enough versus when hospitalization is prudent, clinics risk delayed treatment, unnecessary referrals, or avoidable complications. The episode serves as a reminder that toxicology competency isn’t limited to emergency clinicians; it reaches CSRs, technicians, associates, and anyone involved in triage or discharge education. (music.amazon.in)

There’s also a communication angle. Toxicology myths spread easily online, and pet parents may arrive having already tried a home remedy or having delayed care because they assumed a low-risk exposure. In that environment, practices that offer clear, repeatable advice, and that direct clients quickly to poison-control resources when appropriate, may be better positioned to improve outcomes and reduce friction in urgent cases. That is an inference based on the poison-control guidance and the scale of exposure caseloads, but it fits the direction of current industry messaging. (aaha.org)

What to watch: The next signal to watch is whether this renewed attention translates into more clinic-level protocols, seasonal client education campaigns, and tighter coordination with poison-control services as spring and summer exposure patterns build. Schmid’s recent AAHA work suggests the profession is moving toward more preventive, team-based toxicology education, not just case-by-case response. (aaha.org)

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