First of all, this vet's policy of dropping animals off, to be seen by the vet at her leisure, while the owner isn't there, is bizarre and impractical for a number of reasons, chiefly because animals can't speak, and without the owner there to answer behavioral and symptom related questions, she's voluntarily reducing her knowledge of a given case.
Anyway, I took my 11 year old dog to this vet with the problem of an uncharacteristic drooling issue. She saw him without me during the day and sent him home with medicine (antibiotics). A week later, there was no improvement after his meds had run out, so we went back. Again, she saw him without me and sent him home with more meds (steroids and pain killers). Another week later, he was unable to swallow food, so we returned. She finally saw him with me in the room.
Turns out, she had never even looked into his mouth, Let that sink in. A dog came in with mouth problems, and it took the vet three visits to even checked his mouth before prescribing medication. At this point, she saw that he had a massive tumor growing in his throat, and told me to put him to sleep. Naturally, I was distraught, but eventually decided to get a second opinion from another vet.
The new vet gave the same prognosis but offered to do a surgery that may or may not work in the long term, but would give him some time and a chance to live. Since he hadn't been able to eat, he was malnourished so the surgery was even more risky (thanks to McComb Animal Hospital's treatment). He lived through the surgery and is still alive today, even though the tumor grew back.
Afterward, I did some research. It turns out that steroids amplifies tumor growth. Not to mention antibiotics do literally nothing for cancer. All it would've taken was a simple look into his mouth to discern the issue with him, but that was apparently beyond her capability. Additionally, the steroid treatment grew the tumor faster in a couple of weeks than it has grown in over a year. So, essentially, she came very close to killing my dog through malpractice and negligence. Over a year after his surgery, the tumor still hasn't reached the size it was after her steroid treatment (he has some trouble swallowing, but still eats all the time).
I would not recommend this vet to anyone for anything. Her negligence and complacency nearly killed my dog on its own, but to add insult to injury, she charged me for a month's worth of visits and wanted to euthanize him as a treatment for her terrible treatment. A dog with a mouth problem doesn't even warrant his vet looking into his mouth before treatment. Unbelievable.