Jean-Pierre - As you probably saw I didn't want to get involved then... I was very busy trying to finish up a lecture and an essay. Now I am free again, that's life - sorry. Also as I said you should probably have used a better antibiotic(hardcore human antibiotics, if it's not good enough for humans it is not good enough for my newts
, of course not all antibiotics suitable for humans are suitable for newts)
Ed - I agree you should go to the vet if you can afford. One thing though: Do you think it is realistic that people will pay 4-5 times as much for a vet bill than they did for an animal?
My way is that of trying to collect all the info I can and then do my best with what I have. When I go to the vet it is to get antibiotics.
Pet shops sure don't go to the vet with ill newts and I think the success rate by amateur newt healthcare can be reasonably high if you have a couple of newt suitable broad spectrum antibiotics and some idea how to use it. Naturally the most important thing is to have an idea of how to make the newt comfortable, to know its natural environment.
I believe amputation and forcefeeding if applied correctly are a good, if not necessary, part of amateur healthcare for newts.
Anyway people are doing it, few is posting it here though. Basically what you will get is, why didn't you let the vet do it??
I have been that way myself so...Maybe in the best of worlds that attitude would work.
One problem is that if you start giving advice on how you do forcefeeding etc, you know it is going to be preformed badly by some people and then you are going to be blamed etc. Also most things you do is at best experimental and not exactly something you would recommend.
A side note: Physicians here do NOT grow bacteria(to do Minimal Inhibitory Concentration(MIC) tests) before they give antibiotics to humans, they judge the type of antibiotics by the localization and symptoms etc and put in an antibiotic that usually works. I am not just talking acute healthcare here but ordinary non-acute too.