‘No one cares about the animal like me.’ Indian veterinarians’ experiences of improving animal welfare through Continuing Professional Development

Veterinarians are custodians of animal welfare, ensuring practices remain current and effective in the face of the ever-changing demands of the profession. Continuing Professional Development (CPD) is essential for protecting animal welfare, however access to quality CPD is a challenge in many count...

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Main Authors: Emma L Rayner, Ranjita Bastola, Sumanth Bedre, Andrew D Gibson, Luke Gamble, Jill RD MacKay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2025-01-01
Series:Animal Welfare
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S096272862500003X/type/journal_article
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author Emma L Rayner
Ranjita Bastola
Sumanth Bedre
Andrew D Gibson
Luke Gamble
Jill RD MacKay
author_facet Emma L Rayner
Ranjita Bastola
Sumanth Bedre
Andrew D Gibson
Luke Gamble
Jill RD MacKay
author_sort Emma L Rayner
collection DOAJ
description Veterinarians are custodians of animal welfare, ensuring practices remain current and effective in the face of the ever-changing demands of the profession. Continuing Professional Development (CPD) is essential for protecting animal welfare, however access to quality CPD is a challenge in many countries. India has one of the fastest growing veterinary industries globally, emphasising the importance of accessible CPD opportunities that are relevant to this setting. This study used focus groups to explore how Indian veterinarians identify relevant CPD, barriers they encounter, and their experiences with CPD. We describe three themes: (1) ‘career vs calling’, where veterinarians’ extrinsic and intrinsic motivational factors were identified, such as their desire to protect animal welfare; (2) being ‘willing to learn but can’t’, with context-specific barriers, such as accessing reliable CPD information; and (3) ‘real interactions matter’, where participants described how pedagogical design influenced their choices, e.g. being able to observe animal welfare improvements through practical teaching. We have three recommendations: firstly, to improve CPD learning opportunities informed by evidence-based methods, to meet knowledge and skills gaps such as the high demand for practically focused training; secondly, the development of a unified accreditation and quality assurance framework to assess content, relevance and delivery standards of available CPD options to veterinarians; and, lastly, improved support from employers to address current barriers and facilitate attendance. These findings contribute to the current knowledge gap of factors that influence Indian veterinarians’ experiences of attaining relevant, accessible CPD and makes suggestions to improve standards of veterinary care and, ultimately, patient welfare.
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institution Kabale University
issn 0962-7286
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publishDate 2025-01-01
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spelling doaj-art-8161b79def07494c88b445da20b096ca2025-02-03T07:29:18ZengCambridge University PressAnimal Welfare0962-72862054-15382025-01-013410.1017/awf.2025.3‘No one cares about the animal like me.’ Indian veterinarians’ experiences of improving animal welfare through Continuing Professional DevelopmentEmma L Rayner0https://orcid.org/0009-0009-6314-3483Ranjita Bastola1Sumanth Bedre2Andrew D Gibson3Luke Gamble4Jill RD MacKay5https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7134-4829Worldwide Veterinary Service, 4 Castle Street, Cranborne, Dorset, UKWorldwide Veterinary Service, International Training Centre, Gramya Bhavan, RDO Trust Building, Aruvankadu, The Nilgiris 643202, Tamil Nadu, IndiaWorldwide Veterinary Service, International Training Centre, Gramya Bhavan, RDO Trust Building, Aruvankadu, The Nilgiris 643202, Tamil Nadu, IndiaWorldwide Veterinary Service, 4 Castle Street, Cranborne, Dorset, UKWorldwide Veterinary Service, 4 Castle Street, Cranborne, Dorset, UKRoyal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UKVeterinarians are custodians of animal welfare, ensuring practices remain current and effective in the face of the ever-changing demands of the profession. Continuing Professional Development (CPD) is essential for protecting animal welfare, however access to quality CPD is a challenge in many countries. India has one of the fastest growing veterinary industries globally, emphasising the importance of accessible CPD opportunities that are relevant to this setting. This study used focus groups to explore how Indian veterinarians identify relevant CPD, barriers they encounter, and their experiences with CPD. We describe three themes: (1) ‘career vs calling’, where veterinarians’ extrinsic and intrinsic motivational factors were identified, such as their desire to protect animal welfare; (2) being ‘willing to learn but can’t’, with context-specific barriers, such as accessing reliable CPD information; and (3) ‘real interactions matter’, where participants described how pedagogical design influenced their choices, e.g. being able to observe animal welfare improvements through practical teaching. We have three recommendations: firstly, to improve CPD learning opportunities informed by evidence-based methods, to meet knowledge and skills gaps such as the high demand for practically focused training; secondly, the development of a unified accreditation and quality assurance framework to assess content, relevance and delivery standards of available CPD options to veterinarians; and, lastly, improved support from employers to address current barriers and facilitate attendance. These findings contribute to the current knowledge gap of factors that influence Indian veterinarians’ experiences of attaining relevant, accessible CPD and makes suggestions to improve standards of veterinary care and, ultimately, patient welfare.https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S096272862500003X/type/journal_articleanimal welfareeducationpatient carequality standardsskills-based learningsurgical outcomes
spellingShingle Emma L Rayner
Ranjita Bastola
Sumanth Bedre
Andrew D Gibson
Luke Gamble
Jill RD MacKay
‘No one cares about the animal like me.’ Indian veterinarians’ experiences of improving animal welfare through Continuing Professional Development
Animal Welfare
animal welfare
education
patient care
quality standards
skills-based learning
surgical outcomes
title ‘No one cares about the animal like me.’ Indian veterinarians’ experiences of improving animal welfare through Continuing Professional Development
title_full ‘No one cares about the animal like me.’ Indian veterinarians’ experiences of improving animal welfare through Continuing Professional Development
title_fullStr ‘No one cares about the animal like me.’ Indian veterinarians’ experiences of improving animal welfare through Continuing Professional Development
title_full_unstemmed ‘No one cares about the animal like me.’ Indian veterinarians’ experiences of improving animal welfare through Continuing Professional Development
title_short ‘No one cares about the animal like me.’ Indian veterinarians’ experiences of improving animal welfare through Continuing Professional Development
title_sort no one cares about the animal like me indian veterinarians experiences of improving animal welfare through continuing professional development
topic animal welfare
education
patient care
quality standards
skills-based learning
surgical outcomes
url https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S096272862500003X/type/journal_article
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