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14  RVC CPD 2022  Professional skills for the veterinary team                                                15




 Webinar Plus: Recognising and   Webinar: Practising quality-of-life   Webinar Plus: Healthy and happy   RECORDED
 responding to animal abuse in veterinary   assessment driven small animal medicine   animals: Welfare beyond the five   WEBINARS
 practice  freedoms

 Monday 7th November    NEW  NEW  Monday 23rd January 2023   NEW
 to Sunday 4th December   Friday 18th November  to Sunday 19th February 2023
 Would you like to know more about what you can do to help if you suspect   We all agree that quality of life of our patients is “everything”. In contrast,   Would you like to know how you can best support patient emotional   Available to purchase and view at any time.
 your patients or human clients are victims of abuse?   as a profession we all pay surprisingly little attention to measuring and   wellbeing as well as physical health?   Our recorded webinars available include:
 monitoring quality of life. Let’s change that!
 Everyone responsible for an animal, including owners and veterinary   Much progressive research argues that good animal welfare requires a   •  Effective clinical coaching –how can we get the best from our
 professionals, has a duty of care to protect that animal’s health and welfare.   Our veterinary oath dictates we should do everything in the interests    shift away from simply preventing animal suffering and a move towards the   coaches and students?
 Compromised welfare, which leads to unnecessary animal suffering, can   of the welfare of the animal under our care; we are also urged to practice   promotion of positive, pleasurable experiences and states. While there are   •  How to bring your practice up to speed with hygiene and
 have numerous causes ranging from unintentional neglect to intentional   evidence-based medicine. In order to comply with both demands, it is   many strategies routinely employed by veterinary professionals to help   antimicrobial stewardship
 cruelty. Unintentional neglect can often be easy for veterinary staff to   essential we start measuring, documenting and monitoring the quality of   reduce patient stress and promote positive physical and emotional states   •  Supporting students with specific learning differences in the
 detect. Intentional cruelty on the other hand can be much more difficult to   life of our patients. Treatment decisions, diagnostic decisions and even   there is scope to do much more to cater for the species-specific and   veterinary workplace
 identify, and even when cruelty is suspected many frontline veterinary staff   euthanasia decisions should be guided by this most important parameter.   individual needs of the diverse array of animal patients encountered in   Recorded Webinar Plus
 may not know what steps they can or should take to intervene on an   But if we don’t measure this most important parameter, how can we be   contemporary veterinary practice.  • Recorded Webinar Plus: Navigating the CertAVP A module
 animal’s behalf.  sure we are doing the right thing?
          This course aims to provide you with an overview of recent developments
 Why do this course?  Why do this course?  in animal welfare science, ethology and anthrozoology (incorporating   For full library of recorded webinars and recorded Webinar
                                                                 Plus courses please visit our website www.rvc.ac.uk/cpd
 This course aims to provide you with an understanding of what constitutes   This course will be of interest if you want to learn how to make   animal ethics). Through the use of illustrative case studies you will be
 abuse, and an overview of the legal and extra-legal ways in which animal   scientifically validated quality of life assessment central to your   introduced to some of the ways in which animal welfare can be improved
 abuse can be defined, measured, punished and prevented. You will also   consultations.  in light of this emergent knowledge.
 examine the links between animal cruelty and inter-human violence.
 Key areas  Why do this course?
 Key areas  • The scientific evidence that makes quality of life measurable  Understanding the relationships between animal behaviour and welfare,
 • Defining and identifying animal abuse in veterinary practice  • Currently available tools to measure quality of life in pets  and appreciating the different factors that can shape behaviour and impact
 • Case studies including hoarding, neglect, sexual abuse, violence  •  The effects of quality of life measurement on the patient, the owner  on welfare means you will be better placed to support your patients.
 • Legislation designed to protect animal welfare  and the veterinary team  Key areas
 • Resources for veterinary professionals  •  How you can start making quality of life assessment central to your  • The evolution of welfare (definitions, legislation, research)
 • Veterinary social work  consults TOMORROW  • Developments in ethology, anthrozoology and animal ethics
 • The link between animal and human abuse  You may also be interested in:   •  One Health and welfare
 I
 •  mpacts and support for victims and front-line staff (rescue, rehabilitation,   Webinar Plus: Euthanasia and bereavement – understanding and
 compassion fatigue, burn out, PTSD)  This course can be purchased on its own or as part of a series with:
 supporting your clients, your colleagues and yourself on page 13.
 This course can be purchased on its own or as part of a series with:  Book both and automatically receive a discount of £25 at the checkout.  Webinar Plus: Anthrozoology for veterinary professionals – see page 12
          Webinar Plus: Recognising and responding to animal abuse in veterinary
 Webinar Plus: Anthrozoology for veterinary professionals – see page 12   Course details  practice – see page 14
 Webinar Plus: Healthy and happy animals: Welfare beyond the five   Course type: Webinar
 freedoms – see page 15  Course details
 Course format: Live webinar with an opportunity for Q&A with the
 Course details  lecturer plus access to recorded version for 2 weeks   Course type: Webinar Plus with a live weekly Q&A session
          Course format: A mixture of weekly pre-recorded webinars (which can
 Course type: Webinar Plus with a live weekly Q&A session   Course length: 2 hours   be reviewed throughout the course), live weekly Q&A sessions with the
 Course format: A mixture of weekly pre-recorded webinars (which can   CPD hours: 2   tutor, self-assessment exercises, supplementary reading material and
 be reviewed throughout the course), live weekly Q&A sessions with the   Course fee: £50*   tutor-moderated online discussion forums
 tutor, self-assessment exercises, supplementary reading material and   *Recorded version will be available to purchase for £30 approximately  Course length: 4 weeks
 tutor-moderated online discussion forums   2 weeks after the live course date.  CPD hours: Up to 16
 Course length: 4 weeks   Relevant to CertAVP module: Animal welfare, professional conduct
 CPD hours: Up to 16   Tutor  and veterinary ethics essay for the A Module (A-FAVP.1)
 Relevant to CertAVP module: Animal welfare, professional conduct   Stijn Niessen DVM PhD DipECVIM-CA PGCertVetEd FHEA MRCVS,   Course fee: £379 for 1 course, £699 for 2 courses or £999 for all 3
 and veterinary ethics essay for the A Module (A-FAVP.1)   RCVS Recognised Specialist and EBVS® European Specialist in
 Course fee: £379 for 1 course, £699 for 2 courses or £999 for all 3  Small Animal Internal Medicine, Medisch Centrum voor Dieren,   Tutors
 Amsterdam, Honorary Professor of Internal Medicine, RVC  Alexander Badman-King PhD, Lecturer in Philosophy, University of Exeter
 Tutors   Fenella Eason PhD, Associate Lecturer Anthrozoology, University of Exeter
 Fenella Eason PhD, Associate Lecturer Anthrozoology, University of Exeter    Jessica Gröling PhD, Associate Lecturer Anthrozoology, University of Exeter
 Jessica Gröling PhD, Associate Lecturer Anthrozoology, University of Exeter   Samantha Hurn, PhD, Associate Professor and Programme Director
 Samantha Hurn, PhD, Associate Professor and Programme Director    MA and PhD Anthrozoology, University of Exeter
 MA and PhD Anthrozoology, University of Exeter  Emily Stone PhD, Research Associate Anthrozoology, University of Exeter
 Ruth Serlin BVetMed CertVA PGCAP FHEA MRCVS, Lecturer in
 Veterinary Professionalism, RVC
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