A Survey of Veterinary Student and Veterinarian Perceptions of Shelter Medicine Employment

Author:

Powell LaurenORCID,Reinhard Chelsea L.ORCID,Serpell JamesORCID,Watson BrittanyORCID

Abstract

Shelter medicine appears to be popular among prospective veterinarians, but there is a shortage of veterinarians entering the field to fill available positions. The reasons for this discordance are not well understand. This study describes veterinary students’ interest in shelter medicine, their perceptions of common duties, and their perceptions of employment attributes in shelter medicine, compared with those of current veterinarians. The sample included 147 first-year students, 155 final-year students, and 221 veterinarians who self-completed an online survey between September 2020 and March 2021. We found high levels of interest in shelter medicine, with 40% of first- and 43% of final-year students indicating they were likely to consider working in shelter medicine. Outreach clinics (84% of first-year students, 86% of final-year students), access-to-care clinics (82%, 83%), and loan forgiveness programs (75%, 64%) encouraged many veterinary students to consider working in shelter medicine. The risk of compassion fatigue, burnout, and stress (70%, 68%); weekend work (51%, 59%); euthanasia decision making (49%, 47%); euthanasia (43%, 41%); and expected salaries of shelter veterinarians (39%, 37%) acted as deterrents. Kruskal—Wallis H tests revealed students reported more positive ratings than veterinarians for most shelter medicine duties and employment characteristics, with moderate to strong consensus within groups. Little difference appeared between first- and final-year students. This study highlights target areas for animal shelters to boost recruitment of newly graduated veterinarians. Increasing veterinary students’ exposure to shelter medicine throughout their veterinary training may also help address their concerns regarding euthanasia, salary, and quality of care.

Publisher

University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)

Subject

General Veterinary,Education,General Medicine

Reference37 articles.

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2. The Educational Discipline of Shelter Medicine

3. 3 Stavisky J, Watson B, Dean R, Merritt BL, Van Der Leij RW, Serlin R. Development of international learning outcomes for shelter medicine in veterinary education: a Delphi approach. J Vet Med Educ. Epub 2020 Sep 30. https://doi.org/10.3138/jvme-2020-0027.

4. 4 Nolen RS. A specialty whose time has come: shelter medicine recognized as veterinary specialty [Internet]. Schaumburg (IL): American Veterinary Medical Association; 2014 May 14 [cited 2022 Jul 1]. Available from: https://www.avma.org/javma-news/2014-06-01/specialty-whose-time-has-come.

5. 5 American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA). 2017 AVMA report on veterinary markets. Schaumburg (IL): AVMA; 2017.

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