Veterinary toxicologist challenges one-size-fits-all poisoning care
A new dvm360 Vet Blast Podcast episode is urging clinicians to rethink some of the most common assumptions in companion animal toxicology. Published March 3, 2026, the episode features Dr. Renee Schmid, a board-certified veterinary toxicologist and Pet Poison Helpline executive, arguing that toxic ingestion cases are often oversimplified into blanket rules around hospitalization, lab work, and decontamination. (dvm360.com)
The timing is deliberate. dvm360 framed the episode as part of Pet Poison Prevention Month, a period when veterinary media and poison control services typically amplify client education around household, medication, and seasonal exposures. Schmid has been a recurring voice in that space, with prior dvm360 toxicology content covering holiday hazards, common poisons, and gastrointestinal decontamination. (dvm360.com)
In the new episode, Schmid’s main argument is that clinicians should “treat the patient, not the toxin,” rather than defaulting to rigid protocols. In the excerpt published by dvm360, she used ibuprofen as an example: some exposures may create risk for gastrointestinal ulceration or acute kidney injury, while others may not. She also pointed to amphetamine exposures, where laboratory changes often aren’t expected, making routine CBC, chemistry, and urinalysis less useful in some cases. (dvm360.com)
She also challenged the assumption that every toxic ingestion warrants inpatient care. Depending on the toxicant, dose, clinical status, and the pet parent’s circumstances, some patients may be managed with outpatient fluids, oral medications, or home monitoring, she said. The same logic applies to diagnostics. Schmid specifically cited anticoagulant rodenticide cases, noting that a clotting profile drawn just two hours after ingestion in a non-bleeding patient may not yet be clinically informative, while still adding financial and handling stress. (dvm360.com)
That case-by-case approach is consistent with broader toxicology guidance. Merck Veterinary Manual notes that emesis can be useful within hours of exposure, but appropriateness depends on the toxic agent and patient status, and it specifically warns against unsafe decontamination methods such as salt, syrup of ipecac, or forced gagging. ASPCA toxicology reference materials say emesis is most productive early, generally within 30 to 90 minutes, while Pet Poison Helpline advises pet parents not to induce vomiting before consulting a veterinarian or poison control expert. (merckvetmanual.com)
Activated charcoal is another area where misconceptions persist. Supporting resources from toxicology educators and veterinary references show it can reduce absorption of many toxicants, but not all, and it carries real contraindications, especially in patients with neurologic compromise, ongoing vomiting, or aspiration risk. That reinforces Schmid’s broader point that decontamination is a tool, not a reflex. (merckvetmanual.com)
Why it matters: For veterinary professionals, the episode reflects a larger shift toward practical, individualized care planning. Toxicology cases can become expensive quickly, and blanket recommendations may strain trust with pet parents if clinicians can’t explain why hospitalization, serial labs, or specific interventions are truly necessary. Schmid’s comments suggest that better toxicology care may sometimes mean doing less, but doing it more intentionally, especially when balancing medical benefit, patient stress, and financial limitations. (dvm360.com)
What to watch: The next step is likely more education aimed at helping general practitioners and ER teams identify which poisoning cases genuinely need aggressive inpatient workups, and which can be managed safely through poison control consultation, targeted diagnostics, and outpatient follow-up. (dvm360.com)