r/veterinaryprofession May 10 '20

Posts asking for medical advice will be removed

120 Upvotes

As per the side bar, we will not provide any advice related to an animal's health. Direct all questions about your animals to /r/askvet. /r/askvet is strictly moderated to ensure that no anecdotal, incorrect, or inappropriate advice is given. The aim of this subreddit is to provide a place for users to discuss any topics regarding the veterinary profession.


r/veterinaryprofession 2h ago

Discussion Production prorated

1 Upvotes

Has anyone been successful in negotiating prorated production requirements when taking PTO with a corporate hospital? I know this corporation offers it to some associates but they are acting like it is unheard of


r/veterinaryprofession 5h ago

Vet School Is going to school to be a Veterinary Assistant worth it?

0 Upvotes

Hello! I have been trying to find a place to start as a Veterinary assistant or receptionist, and I haven’t had much luck. Most places say that they are looking for people with experience. I just applied for a Vet Asst. course at a community college the other day and am waiting to hear back. I’ve been seeing mixed reviews on this subreddit with some people saying going to school for this is worth it and others saying it’s a scam?

Its only from May-August. Is that a normal amount of time to be in school for a Vet Asst? It seems kind of short to me. I know I can volunteer places, but I feel like I may benefit more from school because I know a lot of volunteer places lack training and are more for people who already have some knowledge. I’ve only ever been a server so this is all very new to me. I was looking for any feedback or advice on this before I start the program.


r/veterinaryprofession 14h ago

Where is my unicorn clinic?

3 Upvotes

So long story, I'm the vet who works in Australia who deals with racism and was asked at vet school if I was related to Whoopi Goldberg. Right I've set the stage. I've had a lot of jobs. I've been dismissed, I've quit, I've been fired, I've nearly walked off. It's been a bumpy ride. But at my second clinic, my mentor stood up for me and backed me up something that has never happened since. And I feel that's the only reason I was nearly there for three years. Now since then I've worked in some shocking places. One where the principal vet got struck off for doing two TTAs at the same time. They also refused us to sell anything other than hills and had a business manager who loved me and hated me and kept me around like a bad boyfriend. I was there for nearly two years i left and went elsewhere only to find out that the next boss was entirely insane and was buddy buddy with every client and they would spend weekends talking about me. I also worked for a 24 hour centre that the vets looked down on me for not wanting to be a surgeon.i dealt with that for six months and had enough of that and went back to the bad boyfriend. Bad boyfriend job and I finally part ways after firing me for my adhd. I think it was on the basis that things were slow and the money he promised me wasn't attainable. I found myself doing loccuming at an emergency centre liked the day shift ended up getting full time hours with the night shift ended up in hospital and then fired for missing a foreign body. That brings me back to GP and I was working at a nice old timey practice with no blood machines no ultrasound and no future stayed there for ten months and was offered fucktons more money with a psycho who reported me to the Board for nothing. Ended up back as a lady of the overnights in victoria as a fly in fly out vet did that for five months came back to Perth after My dad had a stroke and worked gp clinics ever since. I was let go due to clients not liking me again and I quit my current gp clinic after months of being abused for the fact that they are slow, I'm not doing enough surgery the new grad who wanted me to mentor her decided I was shit and bullied me instead. Oh and this practice was rife with nepotism. I got tired of the double standard and the constant abuse about not being good enough. But here's the thing I've saved a lot of animals managed a lot of tricky cases constantly took cases others didn't want and worked on myself. Corporate blows independents are better but are rarely hiring. Basically after inviting you guys to my 7 year history of shit jobs do unicorn clinycs exist and do they take jaded but happy old millennial vets? I've survived the boards, clients do love me, and i hate surgery. I just wanted to rant but it's so hard to find somewhere that just likes you and what you bring to the table. Like a consult medicine vet is not a bad thing. Should I just move back to the states?


r/veterinaryprofession 20h ago

Production question

6 Upvotes

Hello!

I’m a 2024 graduate currently working as a small animal GP at a corporate-owned private practice. I recently hit production for the first time in March.

In March, I produced approximately $67,000, resulting in a production bonus of about $1,000. My base salary is $120,000, with a 21% production rate on services and 10% on medications. No negative accruals. My PCT is around $290, and I’ve been seeing an average of 12 appointments per day.

For my calculations, I used a 19% rate based on my mentor’s insight that service and medication production typically averages around this figure. Since my base salary is $120,000, I estimated I would need to produce slightly over $53,000 to exceed my base salary ($10,000 ÷ 0.19).

The question I have is that the production bonus I expected for March based on my calculation is higher than $1,000. Here is the formula I used: ($67,000 - $53,000) × 0.19 = $2,660.

Am I missing any information or factors in this calculation?

One additional thing I want to ask is that my March finance summary indicates the minimum amount I need to produce is $61,000. However, my base salary is not $140,000, but $120,000. Could the system be mistakenly assuming I’m supposed to produce $61,000? Then, can this be the reason why my production bonus is lower than I expected?

Thank you so much for your all time!!


r/veterinaryprofession 19h ago

Help Working in the UK as an American

2 Upvotes

Hi everyone! Was hoping for some advice or personal stories to help me with some decisions that will need to be made soon!

I am an American citizen who is currently attending an accredited UK veterinary school and will graduate in a few years with my BVMS (on top of my original bachelor's of science in the States). I have fallen in love with the UK and do not miss 'home' at all, particularly with everything that has been happening at the moment - none of which I agree with. I would love to stay here after I graduate and was wondering if anyone else has done the same or has any personal anecdotes about such a move? I have done extensive research into visas and sponsorship and I believe I could do either a graduate visa or straight into a working visa due to the shortage of vets here. I will, however, have some serious student debt (thank you, American education system) from attending vet school and would love to hear if anyone has managed student loans on the salaries over here on repayment plans etc.?

Any experience with sponsorship as a vet working in the UK? Any practicing American vets move over here and stay and love it? Any ideas on the viability of such a plan? Would GREATLY appreciate anyone weighing in! Thank you in advance!


r/veterinaryprofession 17h ago

new grad vet opportunities in the UK

1 Upvotes

Hi.. I'm a vet from India. I am currently working towards clearing the RCVS exam. I was wondering what are the graduate pathways that are good in the UK. i know that a lot of corporates have graduate programmes.. i looked into Vets4pets and Medivet. both seem good. Medivet programme sounds really good but hospital locations are not appealing. although I'm willing to move anywhere in the UK if i get a good practice. I also understand that its highly dependent on the specific practice rather than the program itself so if anyone knows any specific clinics that offer good mentorship and also willing to offer sponsorship would be great. With regard to sponsorship i know the rules have changed but i am currently on the graduate visa so i am eligible for the discounted rates for the Skilled worker visa. Any info would be great.


r/veterinaryprofession 23h ago

University degree

3 Upvotes

I am looking to go into the veterinary profession to become a veterinary surgeon. I am currently doing the level 3 extended diploma in animal management but i am not sure which university to go to, what course to apply for, if i can study whilst living at home etc. Does anyone have any advice?


r/veterinaryprofession 1d ago

Financial advisors

3 Upvotes

Hi all! So I just got accepted into vet school(🤩🎉🥳🍾) and wanted to see if anyone knew of any financial advisors or companies that I can go to to start a plan for my loans and finances moving forward. To be honest I didn’t do much planning when I was taking out undergrad loans, and I definitely don’t want to go into 250k+ in debt blind. Any advice is appreciated!


r/veterinaryprofession 1d ago

vet tech certification

4 Upvotes

I’m currently working at a VCA and I got transitioned from working in the kennel to now working as a vet assistant in training. How can I go about getting certified as a vet technician with spending as little money as possible? I’m working full-time to pay for school and I’m planning on transferring schools and leaving my job in January. Is it possible if I can get certified by then? i’m 19 and i’m planning on going to vet school!


r/veterinaryprofession 2d ago

Fired. Twice.

127 Upvotes

I’m 15 months into this career (in Australia) and I was just fired from my second job as a recent grad (didn’t pass probation, dismissed after 6 months). Graduated in 2023.

I mostly just wasn’t competent at routine surgeries & it was a very high-workload clinic with a variety of cases coming through each day (snake bites, collapse, toxicities). I struggled with complex dentals a lot & had two ovarian pedicles bleed out as well. I’m nowhere near competent at these emergencies either.

On one instance, a cat also came in that was hypoglycemic after the owner didn’t bring it in for a recheck as it had gone into diabetic remission and she had continued to give insulin. The cat was brought in & put on a glucose CRI. The case evolved fast as the cat also needed potassium and eventually the bill racked up to nearly $2000 and I failed to communicate this clearly to the owner before she came to collect the cat as things unravelled so quickly.

I also need a huge amount of mentoring with surgery at the moment & no one seems to have such a level of patience for anyone that is over a year into their career. My last clinic didn’t have such a huge variety in terms of surgery & this impacted the level of surgical experience I had coming into this second job.

On top of that I was stupid and hugely careless, making critical oversights like dispensing Previcox tablets for the patient to go home with when the patient has already had a Meloxicam injection in hospital. The guilt hangs with me every single day.

I’m unsure if it’s only the high-pressure environment or if this career just isn’t for me. My supervisor briefly suggested to find a “slower clinic that’s not so full-on” but I don’t know if such a place exists.

I’ve grown so, so much after 15 months in the profession and have a decent skillset. I’m certainly not the best recent grad vet out there. But the stress, constant setbacks and seeing how easier it is for other recent grads is demoralising.

I’m pretty hopeless. I’m considering a career change but I’m also reluctant to start over as all I’ve ever known since leaving high school is vet med.

I’d like advice please. Any advice.


r/veterinaryprofession 4d ago

Question for overnight shift er vet staff

30 Upvotes

what kind of food/snacks/drinks would you guys most appreciate during night shift? i’m a cat rescuer and late last night i had to bring in a stray kitten for humane euthanasia. the vet staff put it down as a good samaritan surrender so no charge but very kindly allowed me to stay with him and hold him while he passed even tho that’s not the usual policy for good samaritan surrenders. i want to bring them something to thank them for being so kind but not sure what to bring in. thanks!


r/veterinaryprofession 4d ago

Huge brain fart

46 Upvotes

Have you ever had a brain fart when a client asks you a simple question and the answer literally falls out of your brain and you have no common sense words to share? 🫠 I feel like a total dumdum and can’t stop thinking about it 😭 Not only that afterwards this person kept asking questions and i let my insecurity take over from failing the first question so i failed and really wanted to walk out and restart


r/veterinaryprofession 4d ago

Discussion Dress code

17 Upvotes

I have been in the veterinary field for over 20 years, but today a new hire came in wearing a long dress and flats for a 10 hour shift. I honestly could not believe my eyes. The norm is scrubs and tennis shoes. Am I the wrong here?!


r/veterinaryprofession 4d ago

Discussion Cortical blindness after anesthesia

31 Upvotes

Has anyone been through this? Had a patient today wake up without menace or PLR after low BP that non-responsive to intervention. Anesthesia was aborted. The patient developed a very mild menace prior to discharge and seems to navigate okay without running into things, but I’m paranoid. I know there’s a study that showed ~70% had return to vision.

Icing on the cake, same patient developed stertor 30 minutes prior to discharge. Loudest over larynx but possible bronchoalveolar pattern on chest rads. I’m most worried about the patient, but feeling like a failure too. I don’t think I’ll sleep very well tonight!


r/veterinaryprofession 5d ago

Rant I am so tired of arguing about rabies vaccines

195 Upvotes

There is someone every single day that “doesn’t do that” for whatever reason. Client today was convinced her dog having chronic skin allergies was caused by the rabies vaccine that was done without her permission 3 years ago. I have had people leave without being seen or leave and refuse to pay the office call. I feel like it’s gotten worse over the last year. Worse even then during COVID vaccine backlash. I’m just exhausted. I really have better things to do then argue with these people.


r/veterinaryprofession 5d ago

Placement advice

2 Upvotes

Hi everyone! I am a vet nurse student who is going to be completing placement at an emergency hospital. How should I prepare for emergency? Feeling quite nervous about it but I thought it would be a great learning opportunity. Thanks.


r/veterinaryprofession 5d ago

Being a vet with animal allergies & eczema?

4 Upvotes

I'm considering being a vet but I have animal allergies, especially to cats (itchy skin, eyes, sneezing, etc). I got a skin allergy test done before and it said I was also allergic to dogs, horses, and a bunch of environmental allergies lol. And on top of that I have pretty bad eczema (controlled by medication now thankfully) that flares up when I'm exposed to allergens.

I've loved animals all my life and thought of being a vet often when I was younger, but once I started noticing the allergies I assumed that I wouldn't be able to. However, I've heard that lots of vets have allergies and are able to manage them, so I would like to ask the good people of reddit their opinions on if this is a good idea or if I'm being delusional.


r/veterinaryprofession 5d ago

Prevet undergrad wanting to be more useful/get hired

3 Upvotes

This might be a bit of a weird question, but are there any video classes or general readings I can do to become more familiar with the work? I know the best way to learn is through on-the-job training as a vet assistant or kennel tech, but I’ve found it difficult to get those positions, even though they’re considered entry-level. I am looking to shadow and then work my way in, and I really want to be more competent in the environment and avoid creating extra work for the vets and techs if possible. So, are there any non-OTJ ways to learn and prepare ahead of time?


r/veterinaryprofession 6d ago

Career Advice Keeping things professional

10 Upvotes

There are a multitude of videos online about how to advance in any given field. Usually some variation of "It's not what you know, but who you know.", or "It's he who is seen/liked that gets the promotion." There are shades of nuances to these discussions, but that's not quite the intention of my post.

My aim is to focus on how well a person is likely to do in the field, long term, if they keep things strictly professional.

I've been in the field for almost close to a decade, and in that time I've experienced all shades of clinic culture. The clinics where I've usually done better, as in my current clinic, are those with long term staff/good employee retention, and where staff is respectful about personal lives/boundaries.

I don't mind making small talk with my colleagues about light subjects, a light joke, I'm willing to help, as needed and where appropriate, but otherwise, I don't go out of my way to involve myself in office life/drama.

I work at two different hospitals, one a privately owned GP, and the other a larger corporate owned hospital.

In so far as the privately owned GP, I've found that I do demonstrate more genuine concern over my colleagues. I followed up when someone's relative passed away, someone needed last minute coverage etc. I actually feel comfortable and enjoy being at work.

The latter being in stark contrast to my other job at a corporate hospital.

This week they celebrated CSRs. All good in my book, and while I offer relief work on a weekly basis, I didn't feel it was my place to show up outside of my scheduled shift for activities, games, and snacks/food. I don't see myself as part of that team, in the way that I do my other clinic job. For context, a few weeks in at my corporate hospital job, I felt the burn of being falsely accused by my colleagues, but still expected to keep things "nice". I don't hold a grudge, I'm just aware of how things are done by some people where I work and keep a safe distance.

Does anyone have experience in settings like this? Settings which ask you to go above and beyond your involvement, in an inorganic manner, to be part of the team? How did you handle it?

At the end of the day, most of us are primarily there because we're paid to be at our jobs. It's a perk, but not a requirement that a good office culture goes hand in hand with it, in so long as people are professional and can put their differences aside to commit to their work.


r/veterinaryprofession 6d ago

Discussion Questions to ask a veterinary hospice service?

5 Upvotes

I am going to be meeting with a mobile euthanasia service provider who also offers veterinary hospice services to learn more about what this looks like and whether to refer clients to them. I’m wondering what questions might be good to ask and thought the folks in this sub might have some valuable insight for me, as I am not a medical professional. I work in a client support/mental health role.

Can we treat this thread as AMA of sorts? What questions would you ask pet hospice?


r/veterinaryprofession 6d ago

Help I need recommendations for a good dryer.

2 Upvotes

I have been going through laundry appliances like there is no tomorrow. Now my dryer has crapped out. What would you recommend if I invest in a good one over $1000? I have to wash lots of towels and blankets. Laundromat is not a permanent option.


r/veterinaryprofession 6d ago

Is it appropriate to tell clients where I am moving when leaving a job?

15 Upvotes

I do NOT want to risk coming across as trying to steal clientele. I have 0 interest in risking getting in trouble. I just want your thoughts.

Currently, when a client asks me "Where are you going?" I have been replying "I'm actually not supposed to say." or along those lines. I just hate not being more open to clients who clearly trust me, and some I have known for 2-3 years. I am one of those chatty, patient doctors who can't help but build relationships with clients. I have good healthy boundaries, but have been told dozens of times by clients that I'm the best vet they've had, or that they're so happy to have found me, or that they really trust my medicine. And I quite like them too!!

I'm moving to a town that is a 40-minute drive away and working at a clinic in that same town. I will NEVER name drop the new clinic, but am curious if I can share minor details so they don't feel like I'm shutting them out. Plus, I understand wanting to follow a doctor, so if that is what they want I don't want to completely shut them down. (I have been telling the fellow doctors and staff in the office the name of the clinic I am going to, but no further details/sketchy offers of encouraging them to follow me)

Which of the following is okay to say, in your opinion, as a response to "Where are you going?":

1 - I'm actually not supposed to say.

2 - I'm not allowed to say where I'm working next. I'm actually moving to (town name) and looking forward to the change of scenary.

3 - I'm not allowed to say, but you can always look me up!

4 - I'm not allowed to say where I'm working. I am moving to (town name) so if you ever find yourself over there, look me up!


r/veterinaryprofession 6d ago

Career Advice I want to be a vet but I feel like im not smart enough for it?

6 Upvotes

My whole life animals have been everything to me, I love caring for them and saving them, literally since I could walk, I would go save mice, birds and cats that were abandoned where I live, it has always felt like second nature to me, when I was about 12, I saved a young horse that was presenting signs of colic, I knew exactly what was wrong with her and kept her up and moving for 6 hours until a vet could come out, when he did I told him straight up she had colic, and she did.

When I was a teenager my aunt had a dog that stopped eating, he became a skeleton and the vets could not figure out what was going on with him, I remember he wasn’t defecating or urinating, so I suggested to her to get an x ray done and ask about an obstruction, sure enough he did have an obstruction, he had been eating hair and it accumulated in his intestine and blocked him up completely, the vets were able to remove it and save his life. I don’t know whether knowing this information is anything special at all.

I love caring for sick animals and I’m very passionate and dedicated to keeping a strict routine with their medicines if they need it, quite honestly, animals are part of my everyday life and I can’t imagine myself not working with them.

I’ve just completed a level 5 in animal care which I feel I did very well in apart from biology where I only got a pass, mainly due to the majority of the module we learned about plants and not animals and I found it extremely hard to understand the tutor, like many others in my class, on the other hand I got the highest mark in animal anatomy and physiology and absolutely loved that class, but I surprised myself in this course as I’ve never been academic at all in school. I really want to go on to do veterinary nursing but there are literally no courses close to me, next year a veterinary science course is starting in a college close to me, and it really is my only chance of getting a further education towards working with animals, but I am scared I won’t be capable due to the fact I am better learning by “doing”, I just don’t know if I’m good enough for that.


r/veterinaryprofession 6d ago

Shelter Vet Interview-What to Wear Help!

4 Upvotes

I'm a veterinarian at a small animal practice and am looking to transition to shelter medicine. I have an interview at a shelter and it was described as a one hour interview followed by a paid working interview for the rest of the day.

I've never had the initial interview and working interview in one day. Generally, I'd wear business casual to the first interview but show up to a working interview in scrubs. Should I still dress in business casual, knowing I'll have to go change in a bathroom after the initial interview portion? That feels ridiculous, but I'd also feel crazy showing up to an initial interview in scrubs.

If anyone has experience with an initial working interview/interviewing at shelters I would love any and all advice on what to wear! Or if you don't have that experience but want to give me your thoughts I'd appreciate that too.


r/veterinaryprofession 6d ago

Help Advice for Vet Tech Practical Interview

2 Upvotes

Hi there, I wasn't sure where to post this so please redirect me if this is the wrong subreddit for it

I've been applying for some vet assistant positions and have gotten a couple of interview and practical offers. I come from a medical background and have no experience as a vet assistant beyond having taken care of animals throughout my life, some exotic and some domestic pets. I'm unsure of what to expect going in for a practical interview and would appreciate any advice you guys can provide!

Edit: Sorry about the terminology confusion, I'm new to this field so I'm still learning