Citizen K9 Dog Training & Agility LLC BLOG POSTS How Owners Accidentally Reinforce Bad Behavior at the Vet Office

How Owners Accidentally Reinforce Bad Behavior at the Vet Office

By Brandy Eggeman, Citizen K9 Dog Training & Agility LLC

Going to the vet is a necessary part of responsible dog ownership, but for many dogs, it can also be one of the most stressful experiences they encounter. The sights, smells, other animals, new people, and handling can be overwhelming—even for dogs who behave well elsewhere.

But what many owners don’t realize is that the way they respond to their dog’s stress or excitement at the vet can actually reinforce the very behaviors they want to stop.
This isn’t intentional—every owner wants their dog to feel safe. But dogs learn through association and reinforcement, and the vet clinic creates a perfect storm for accidental teaching.

Let’s break down the most common ways this happens—and how to prevent it.


1. Comforting a Dog While They Are Acting Fearful or Reactive

This is the most common and understandable mistake.

A dog is trembling, whining, barking, or hiding behind their owner. The owner reaches down to pet them, speak softly, or pick them up to “reassure” them.

To humans, this means comfort.
To dogs, it means:

“Good job acting scared—keep doing that.”

By giving attention, touch, or soothing words during the moment of fear, the behavior is unintentionally reinforced. Dogs repeat what gets rewarded.

What to do instead:

  • Reward only calm, quiet behavior.
  • Use neutral body language when your dog is anxious—not overly coddling.
  • Redirect with simple obedience cues: sit, look, heel.
  • Bring high-value treats and reward confidence, not fear.

You’re not ignoring their feelings—you’re teaching them how to cope.


2. Allowing the Dog to Pull, Bark, or Wander Around the Waiting Room

Waiting rooms are full of triggers: other dogs, cats, smells, and sounds. Many owners allow their dog to:

  • Pull on the leash
  • Bark at other animals
  • Jump on the counter
  • Pace or wander
  • Hide under chairs

All of this teaches the dog that the waiting room is a place where they control the environment—not you.

What to do instead:

  • Keep your dog beside you in a structured sit or down.
  • Use a shorter leash to limit wandering.
  • Reward calm focus on you.
  • Move to your car to wait if your dog gets overstimulated.

Waiting room manners start before you ever walk through the door.


3. Letting the Dog “Avoid” the Vet Tech or Doctor

When a dog backs away, growls, or tries to hide during handling, many owners respond by:

  • Pulling away with the dog
  • Saying “It’s okay, it’s okay!” in a worried tone
  • Asking the vet tech to slow down
  • Holding their dog tightly while speaking anxiously

This unintentionally teaches avoidance behavior works.

What to do instead:

  • Stay calm and confident—dogs mirror your emotions.
  • Praise only after the dog allows handling or calms down.
  • Let trained staff safely take the lead.
  • Practice handling desensitization at home (paws, ears, muzzle, tail).

A dog that believes avoiding pressure “works” will continue escalating their behavior.


4. Not Practicing Vet Skills Outside the Vet Office

Many behaviors owners label as “fear” at the vet are actually lack of exposure or handling skills.

Dogs need practice with:

  • Being lifted onto a table
  • Muzzle handling
  • Paw and nail manipulation
  • Ear checks
  • Temperature being taken
  • Gentle restraint
  • Standing still for exams

If these only happen once a year—of course the dog panics.

What to do instead:

Create fun, short “vet practice sessions” at home:

  • Look in ears → treat
  • Touch paws → treat
  • Hold muzzle for 2 seconds → treat
  • Lift tail → treat
  • Stand still → praise

You are conditioning comfort long before the appointment.


5. Owners Becoming Anxious—And the Dog Feeding Off It

Dogs read human energy better than we read theirs.

If the owner is nervous, worried, embarrassed, or stressed, the dog picks up on it immediately. This often makes fear-based behaviors worse.

What to do instead:

  • Breathe.
  • Stand tall and confident.
  • Speak in a normal, neutral tone.
  • Treat the experience like no big deal.

Your dog takes their emotional cue from you.


How to Set Your Dog Up for Success at the Vet

Here are simple habits that make a huge difference:

✔ Bring high-value treats
✔ Practice calm obedience before entering
✔ Keep a short, relaxed leash
✔ Reward confidence—not anxiety
✔ Advocate for your dog without over-coddling
✔ Consider pre-visit training sessions
✔ If needed, request to wait in the car instead of a lobby

A well-prepared dog feels safe because you’ve built a pattern of calm, controlled behavior, not because you’ve comforted their fear.


Final Thoughts

Most dog owners truly want to help their dog feel safe. The issue isn’t intent—it’s misunderstanding how dogs interpret our reactions.

By rewarding calm behavior, staying structured, and giving your dog the confidence to handle new environments, you teach them that the vet isn’t a place to fear—it’s just another place where good manners apply.

If your dog struggles with vet visits and you’d like professional help, I offer personalized training programs and behavior consultations in Riverton, Wyoming and surrounding areas. Together, we can teach your dog to feel confident, calm, and safe during vet visits.

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