A longstanding shortage of veterinarians in areas across the US has caused crises for some pet owners; contributed to mental health issues among veterinary staff; and could leave the country at risk in terms of food safety and public health, experts have warned.
The lack of veterinarians and veterinary professionals has been attributed to the high cost of entry, long hours and the stress of dealing with animal owners in life and death situations.
The warning comes as Not One More Vet, a veterinarian mental health charity said it received reports of vets facing cyberbullying from clients â a troubling trend in a profession that has long had a high risk of suicide.
Laura Molgaard, dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Minnesota, said the shortage can be traced back over four decades.
âStarting in about 1980, we saw an increased demand for veterinary services with an increased ownership of pets, and also an increased demand from those owners for more services for those pets,â she said.
âAnd then, over that amount of time, at least in the US, there was not a commensurate increase in veterinary schools or seats in those veterinary schools for a very, very long time.â
The shortages are being felt most in rural areas. Part of the reason is that veterinary school graduates have to go where the money is â given the student debt they are often lumbered with â and jobs in cities pay more. This has led to pet owners and other animal owners struggling to find care in some parts of the country â but there are risks beyond pets not receiving adequate care, Molgaard said.
âThereâs a risk to things like food safety and public health. Veterinarians are an important role in protecting the health of individual animals, but also protecting the health of populations of animals. And we take an oath to protect the public health as well,â Molgaard said.
âWhen we donât have veterinarians in the community, we do risk the health of animals, people and the environment they share.â
Veterinarians serve as âearly detectors of animal diseaseâ, Molgaard said, including of diseases that can be transmitted to humans. It was a vet who first identified the West Nile virus, while professionals have also been responsible for reporting outbreaks of avian influenza, African swine fever and bovine spongiform encephalopathy â better known as âmad cow diseaseâ.
âVeterinarians are on the frontlines of detection and surveillance for those kinds of diseases. And when we donât have veterinarians in a community, those diseases can go undetected until itâs too late,â Molgaard said.
The pressure of the job, and the relatively low pay in comparison to careers, such as human medicine and dentistry, which require a similar level of training, can be intense. Support staff, including veterinary technicians, are often underpaid and overworked, said Liz Hughston, a veterinary technician specialist and president of the National Veterinary Professionals Union.
âWe have a major problem with people leaving this profession,â Hughston said.
âThe pay is not great [for veterinary technicians], and for veterinarians, it isnât great in relation to their debt load. A lot of the veterinarians are coming out of school with huge amounts of debt: $400,000 in student debt, and then theyâre getting paid somewhere between $85,000 and $105,000 a year to start.
âMost people would look at that and say: âOh, thatâs a good wage.â But when you look at the amount of time that they spend in school, the amount of debt that theyâre coming out with, and then to come out and not be paid all that well, in relation to their professional degree and training, I think that is one piece.â
Meanwhile, veterinary technicians, who have to complete studies in an educational program and pass the veterinary technician national exam to practice, âare not paid a living wageâ, Hughston said. She said technicians and veterinarian assistants frequently find they can earn more in entry level retail or fast-food jobs.
âFast food sucks, but also: youâre making money. And youâre not expected to work overtime, youâre not making life and death decisions. Youâre not getting bit and scratched,â she continued. âYouâre not dealing with zoonotic diseases: youâre not going to get a disease from a hamburger.â
Thereâs also âsticker shockâ, Hughston said, when pet owners find out how much certain treatments will cost. Pet insurance is not widely adopted in the US, so when a cat or dog or tortoise gets sick, the owners sometimes have to pay eye-watering bills. They frequently are not happy about the price.
âAll we want to do is help animals. And then weâre faced with people that we have to deal with who are telling us how terrible we are, what terrible people we are, that weâre only after the money,â she said.
âOftentimes, because we have the option of euthanasia in veterinary medicine, people make life and death decisions based on finances, and that is a soul killer for veterinary professionals. Because we look at that and we say: âWe can fix this. Itâs fixable.â But the people canât pay to fix it.â
Against this backdrop, suicide rates are high. A 2018 study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that female veterinarians are 3.5 times more likely to die from suicide compared with the rest of the general population, while male veterinarians were 2.1 times as likely to die from suicide.
Gigi Tsontos, executive director of Not One More Vet, founded in response to the death of a veterinarian in 2014, said there are different reasons for the number of deaths.
âSome are the workload, some are the connection with the different things that happen in a clinic. You donât get to go into a veterinary clinic and just pet dogs and cats all day. Thereâs a lot of decisions that are made that are difficult. Thereâs a lot of people involved. Letâs say a family comes in and they have a pet who needs a high level of care, but they canât afford it â thereâs discussing that with them,â Tsontos said.
The CDC study found that the rate of suicide among veterinarians had been high for the past three decades. A new issue that veterinary professionals face, however, is cyberbullying.
âIâve heard stories of people claiming something happened with their pet â and they took them to a vet. And they just vilify the vet or the vet tech on social media,â Tsontos said.
âVeterinarians are trying to do the best that they can. And they care about animals, and they come into this industry because of that.â