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Innovative app reopens stress debate
stressed vet
When asked about the most stressful aspects of their work, graduates reported being on call and complex medical cases among other factors.
Radar app could support veterinary students and new graduates

The Samaritans charity has launched its Radar app that will notify Twitter users if people who they follow on the site appear to be suicidal. This might provide useful support for veterinary students and recent graduates suffering from stress-related anxiety and depression.

There is no doubt that levels of psychological distress are elevated in the veterinary profession compared with the general population. Vets also show a greater tendency towards suicide, with a proportional mortality ratio for suicide of around three to four times that of the general population – with younger vets, in general, experiencing higher levels of stress than their older colleagues.

The subject of combatting stress in veterinary practice was the subject of an article in the Spring 2014 edition of Veterinary Practice Today. When veterinary graduates were asked what they felt were the most stressful aspects of life in practice, they responded with the following:
  • No mentoring system within practice
  • Being on call
  • Large animal visits
  • The sudden transition from life in vet school to an environment where they felt cut off from support
  • Complex medical cases
  • The responsibility of lone decision making
  • Reluctance to ask too many clinical questions of their colleagues
That is an interesting list.

Today’s veterinary students and new graduates are very social media savvy and according to the 2014 RCVS Survey of the Veterinary Profession, 94 per cent of those aged between 20-29 have a Facebook account and just over 13 per cent visit Twitter – many of them for business purposes as well as social networking. Although the Samaritans are still working on a Facebook adaptation of the Radar app, the Twitter version might just prove to be a life-saving, safety net for some young veterinary professionals who may be struggling with some of the points above.

However, despite the availability of an increasing amount of support, there remains a great deal of work to be done upstream from the immediate problem. Veterinary bodies including the BVA, BSAVA and Vetlife, have long provided helplines for veterinary professionals who are suffering from stress and depression; but aspects of life in practice, such as ‘being on call’ and the ‘responsibility of lone decision making’, should really not come as a great surprise to graduating veterinary surgeons.

Working as a veterinary surgeon is a hugely challenging role. The observations in the list above clearly beg the question as to whether there is sufficient trampling on ‘rose-tinted spectacles’ by career advisers, vet school selection boards and practising vets when potential vet students present themselves for consideration in the first place.

 

 

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Strangles survey seeks views of horse owners

News Story 1
 With Strangles Awareness Week just around the corner (5-11 May), vets are being encouraged to share a survey about the disease with their horse-owning clients.

The survey, which has been designed by Dechra, aims to raise awareness of Strangles and promote best practices to prevent its transmission. It includes questions about horse owners' experiences of strangles, together with preventative measures and vaccination.

Respondents to the survey will be entered into a prize draw to win two VIP tickets to Your Horse Live 2025. To access the survey, click here 

Click here for more...
News Shorts
DAERA to reduce BVD 'grace period'

DAERA has reminded herd keepers of an upcoming reduction to the 'grace period' to avoid BVD herd restrictions.

From 1 May 2025, herd keepers will have seven days to cull any BVD positive or inconclusive animals to avoid restrictions being applied to their herd.

It follows legislation introduced on 1 February, as DAERA introduces herd movement restrictions through a phased approach. Herd keepers originally had 28 days to cull BVD positive or inconclusive animals.

DAERA says that, providing herd keepers use the seven-day grace period, no herds should be restricted within the first year of these measures.

Additional measures, which will target herds with animals over 30 days old that haven't been tested for BVD, will be introduced from 1 June 2025.

More information is available on the DAERA website.