I would not yell at her when you do this. That will make the situation much worse. She'll associate the negative experience of getting drops in her ears with another negative experience (yelling). Then she REALLY won't want to hold still or come to you to get them. Backing her into a corner is a very bad idea also. When dogs are scared, they have a fight or flight response. Right now Jada is fleeing from the meds, but if she is backed into a corner, she'll have no choice but to fight. I am NOT saying your dog will bite you, Emily. But just in general, it is not good to back a dog into a corner, especially if you're trying to get them used to something 
Keep it as positive as you can for her with treats and praise before, during, and after the drops. I have a friend who smears peanut butter on her fridge and lets her dogs lick it off while she does things like ear drops or toenail cutting.
You might want to carry around the eardrops a lot - even when you're not going to give them - so she'll get used to it. When she's okay with you holding the bottle, then you can start feeding her treats while handling her ears, but not actually giving the drops. When she's comfortable with that, you can start pretending to put the drops in, but leave the lid closed so you're actually not putting anything in her ears. While you're doing it, keep the praise going. Then when she's comfortable with that, you can try to actually give them. I realize this process takes time and by the time she gets comfortable with it, her ear infection might be gone! But its just a technique that works well in many situations
Alyson
Shiloh, Reece, Lolly, Skylar
and fosters Snickers, Missy, Magic, Merlin, Maya
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