Event Type Webinar
november
Event Details
By: Daniel J. Fletcher, PhD, DVM, DACVECC Description: Delivery of quality healthcare requires highly skilled teams that can remain effective in the
Event Details
By: Daniel J. Fletcher, PhD, DVM, DACVECC
Description: Delivery of quality healthcare requires highly skilled teams that can remain effective in the complex, unpredictable environment that is the modern veterinary practice. Drawing on the evidence based TeamSTEPPS system developed for human health care, this session will describe the VetTEAMS framework, a series of team competencies and simple communication tools that can be integrated into your practice to reduce medical errors, and improve team performance, and enhance staff satisfaction. Delivery of high-quality veterinary care requires extraordinary team work. Learn how you can help your team reach the next level of efficiency, quality, and safety.
By the end of the session, attendees will be able to:
- Explain the principles of good leadership of a veterinary healthcare team.
- Describe the 4 fundamental characteristics of good communication in a veterinary healthcare setting.
- Demonstrate techniques and tools for achieving situation awareness through situation monitoring skills.
- Describe the principles of mutual support and the behaviors that can maximize a team’s ability to ask for and offer help to allocate resources where they are needed.
Speaker Info: Dr. Fletcher has been faculty at Cornell since 2006. After receiving a BS in Electrical Engineering from Drexel University and a PhD in Bioengineering from the University of California, he obtained his DVM from the University of California at Davis. He then completed an internship and emergency and critical care residency at Penn. He is co-chair of the RECOVER Initiative, which published the first evidence-based veterinary CPR guidelines, and is past-president of the American College of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care.
Time
(Monday) 8:00 pm - 9:00 pm
december
18dec8:00 pm9:00 pmAssisted Natural Death in an Animal ICU Setting VECCS x VIN Webinar
Event Details
By: Stacy Montgomerie, DVM, CHPV Description: A case-based discussion of assisted natural death in ICU patients as a treatment option when euthanasia
Event Details
By: Stacy Montgomerie, DVM, CHPV
Description: A case-based discussion of assisted natural death in ICU patients as a treatment option when euthanasia is declined. The majority of families choose direct euthanasia for their animal companions, however, there is a subset of animal caregivers that gravitate toward options other than euthanasia. How can veterinary clinicians honor animal caregiver wishes for the death of their animal companion without performing direct euthanasia while avoiding animal suffering and upholding the veterinary oath? We will explore direct euthanasia alternatives using a case-based discussion of assisted natural death in the hospital/ICU setting. The clinical management of assisted natural death, guiding the family through the process of dying, and supporting the veterinary team during and after the dying process will be addressed.
By the end of the session, attendees will be able to:
- Discuss overview of assisted natural death as an alternative to euthanasia.
- Discuss clinician communication and medical responsibilities.
- Use case-based discussion as a model.
Speaker Info: Stacy Ann Montgomerie is a hospice/ER/ICU staff veterinarian at DoveLewis Emergency and Specialty Hospital in Portland, Oregon. Dr. Montgomerie joined DoveLewis in 2016 and has been an ER and ICU DVM since graduating in 2012. Dr. Montgomerie also earned her hospice/palliative care certification via the International Association for Animal Hospice and Palliative Care (IAAHPC) in 2022. Outside of work, Dr. Montgomerie enjoys mushroom foraging, hiking, pickling/fermentation, crocheting/ knitting, travel, and skeleton preparation/articulation. She also enjoys spending time with her partner and pets.
Time
(Monday) 8:00 pm - 9:00 pm
january
Event Details
By: Angela M Lennox, DVM, DABVP-Avian, ECM; DECZM-Small Mammal Description: Rabbits commonly present with signs consistent with GI dysfunction; distinguishing these from
Event Details
By: Angela M Lennox, DVM, DABVP-Avian, ECM; DECZM-Small Mammal
Description: Rabbits commonly present with signs consistent with GI dysfunction; distinguishing these from actual obstruction, which may require surgical management, requires a thorough approach. This presentation helps practitioners identify this group of rabbits, and presents current thoughts on medical management of those not requiring surgery.
By the end of the session, attendees will be able to:
- Understanding of the typical presentation of rabbits with GI dysfunction
- Tools for helping to distinguish which are more likely to have GI obstructive disease
- Protocols for both medical and surgical management
Speaker Info: Angela M. Lennox is a graduate of Purdue University School of Veterinary Medicine, and has practiced exclusively exotic animal medicine since 1991. She is the owner of the Avian and Exotic Animal Clinic of Indianapolis. She is a diplomate in the American Board of Veterinary Practitioner (ABVP) in both Avian and Exotic Companion Mammal Medicine, and a diplomate of the European College of Zoological Medicine, Small Mammal Medicine. Dr. Lennox is an adjunct professor at Purdue University Department of Clinical Sciences.
Time
(Monday) 8:00 pm - 9:00 pm
february
Event Details
By: Christopher G. Byers, DVM, DACVECC, DACVIM (SAIM), CVJ Description: In recent months, sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) have become available for
Event Details
By: Christopher G. Byers, DVM, DACVECC, DACVIM (SAIM), CVJ
Description: In recent months, sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) have become available for the treatment of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in feline patients. One of the rare potential side effects of this class of medication is euglycemic diabetic ketoacidosis (eDKA). Learners will review relevant pathophysiology of, as well as diagnostic testing and therapeutic interventions for cats suspected or confirmed to be living with eDKA.
By the end of the session, attendees will be able to:
- To understand the mechanism of action of sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors
- To recognize clinical manifestations of euglycemic diabetic ketoacidosis in cats
- To understand appropriate diagnostic tests to accurately diagnose patients living with eDKA
- To having working knowledge of appropriate therapeutic interventions for eDKA
Speaker Info: Dr. Christopher G. Byers is a board-certified veterinary emergency & critical care and small animal internal medicine specialist, as well as a certified veterinary journalist, based in Omaha, Nebraska. He received his DDVM from Cornell University. Dr. Byers works as a teleconsultant in for VetCT, and he is the Co-Editor of the textbooks, Feline Emergency & Critical Care Medicine and Canine Emergency & Critical Care Medicine. He has also published chapters and articles in numerous textbooks and peer-reviewed medical journals.
Time
(Monday) 8:00 pm - 9:00 pm