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

IF 2.3 Animal welfare (South Mimms, England) Pub Date : 2025-02-03 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1017/awf.2025.3
Emma L Rayner, Ranjita Bastola, Sumanth Bedre, Andrew D Gibson, Luke Gamble, Jill Rd MacKay
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Abstract

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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“没人比我更关心动物。”印度兽医通过持续专业发展改善动物福利的经验。
兽医是动物福利的保管人,在面对不断变化的职业需求时,确保实践保持最新和有效。持续专业发展(CPD)对保护动物福利至关重要,然而,在许多国家,获得高质量的CPD是一个挑战。印度拥有全球发展最快的兽医产业之一,强调了与此环境相关的可获得的持续专业发展机会的重要性。本研究采用焦点小组的方法来探讨印度兽医如何识别相关的CPD,他们遇到的障碍,以及他们的CPD经历。我们描述了三个主题:(1)“职业vs职业”,其中确定了兽医的外在和内在动机因素,例如保护动物福利的愿望;(2)“愿意学习但不会”,存在特定情境障碍,例如获取可靠的CPD信息;和(3)“真正的互动很重要”,参与者描述了教学设计如何影响他们的选择,例如能够通过实践教学观察动物福利的改善。我们有三个建议:第一,通过循证方法改善CPD学习机会,以满足知识和技能差距,例如对注重实践的培训的高需求;第二,制定统一的认证和质素保证架构,以评估现有兽医持续专业进修课程的内容、相关性和提供标准;最后,改善雇主的支持,以解决目前的障碍,促进出勤。这些发现有助于了解目前影响印度兽医获得相关的、可获得的CPD经验的因素,并为提高兽医护理标准和最终改善患者福利提出建议。
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