Toxicology expert urges case-by-case approach to pet ingestions
A new dvm360 Vet Blast Podcast episode is pushing back on some of the most common assumptions in small-animal toxicology, with Renee Schmid, DVM, DABT, DABVT, telling listeners that not every toxic ingestion warrants the same workup, hospitalization plan, or diagnostics. Published March 3, 2026, the episode centers on myths that can drive overtreatment, unnecessary stress for patients, and added financial burden for pet parents. (dvm360.com)
The timing is deliberate. dvm360 framed the episode around Pet Poison Prevention Month, a period when clinics often revisit poison-prevention messaging and triage workflows. Schmid is a familiar voice in that space: she serves as director of veterinary medicine and senior veterinary toxicologist at Pet Poison Helpline, and she has also been featured in recent AAHA education on seasonal toxic exposures and in prior dvm360 coverage aimed at correcting common toxicology myths. (dvm360.com)
In the published transcript, Schmid’s central point is that toxicology rarely fits a black-and-white algorithm. Using ibuprofen as an example, she noted that one patient may face risk for gastrointestinal ulceration or acute kidney injury, while another may not, depending on exposure details and patient factors. She also said some cases can be managed outside the hospital, including with oral medications at home, if vomiting isn’t ongoing and the overall situation supports outpatient care. (dvm360.com)
She made a similar argument about diagnostics. Schmid said routine lab work is often overapplied in toxicology, citing amphetamine exposures, where clinicians may not expect the hematologic or organ-function changes that standard panels are meant to detect. She also pointed to anticoagulant rodenticide cases, where clotting tests run only a couple of hours after exposure may not yet reflect the toxic process and can become an avoidable expense for pet parents while adding handling stress for the animal. (dvm360.com)
That perspective fits with broader poison-control messaging from major toxicology resources. Pet Poison Helpline advises against giving home antidotes or inducing vomiting without professional guidance, while ASPCA Poison Control continues to position case-specific toxicology consultation as a 24/7 resource for veterinarians and pet parents facing possible exposures. AAHA’s latest seasonal toxicology coverage, also featuring Schmid, argues that awareness and anticipation help teams recognize symptoms earlier and educate clients before exposures happen. (petpoisonhelpline.com)
Industry reaction here is less about controversy than reinforcement. Earlier dvm360 reporting featuring Schmid has already challenged myths such as exaggerated poinsettia toxicity and overly broad assumptions about decontamination, including misuse of hydrogen peroxide. Taken together, her recent appearances suggest an ongoing educational push toward more precise, evidence-based toxicology decisions rather than reflexive protocols. That’s especially relevant as practices balance medical thoroughness with client affordability and patient stress. (dvm360.com)
Why it matters: For veterinary teams, this is really about triage discipline. A more tailored toxicology approach can help clinics avoid low-yield testing, reserve hospitalization for patients who truly need it, and communicate more clearly with pet parents about why recommendations differ from case to case. In a climate where spectrum of care remains a live issue across the profession, toxicology may be one of the clearest examples of how individualized medicine can improve both clinical efficiency and client trust. (dvm360.com)
What to watch: The next step is likely more operational than regulatory: expect clinics, poison-control services, and CE providers to keep refining toxin-specific triage guidance, especially around seasonal exposures, decontamination decisions, and when outpatient management is appropriate. (aaha.org)