Are you prepared for a disaster?

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Podcast

NCVMA president Shannon Bass, DVM, shares how veterinary teams can help and be more prepared for a natural disaster

On this week's episode of The Vet Blast Podcast presented by dvm360, Adam Christman, DVM, MBA, welcomed Shannon Bass, DVM, president of the North Carolina Veterinary Medical Association to discuss preparedness and ways to help if you are in or near an area that was impacted by some type of disaster. Throughout the episode, Bass shared with Christman why professionals should not just self-deploy, where to access grants, and how much NCVMA has been able to give back to its veterinary community.

Below is a partial transcript:

Adam Christman, DVM, MBA: The communities like to get involved too. So not just, I'm assuming, not just the veterinary professionals too, but pet owners and alike, they really want to get involved. So it sounds like it's a collaborative approach to disaster preparedness.

Shannon Bass, DVM: It really is, and we saw so many examples of a shelter might say, I need cat litter. And so pretty quickly, what we saw within a few days, they'd get cat litter, but then someone would find that social media post a week later and start to propagate it again. And then the shelter would get the second and third and fourth wave of cat litter that they didn't meet at that time, and they had no place to store it at that time.

So it was really tricky when you saw kind of this glut of supplies. And then on the non veterinary side, when I was there, a few times, you would drive by churches that had just tables of soaking wet clothes in their parking lot, because so many random clothes had been donated with no real destination that they were just going to get thrown in the trash.

Christman: It's unbelievable. And I know the AVMA has some resources through their website as well, right?

Bass: They have some great resources. And the AVMF, the American Veterinary Medical Foundation, they donated to the NCVMA. They were great partners. They have wonderful grants as well. And so any AVMA member, and I do think they even have a set of grants for non members. And so the AVMA is has been a really great partner for us. We were able to establish 2 different grants that were new just for this disaster, one [was] veterinary community grants, and those were $300 grants that were available to any veterinary staff member. All they had to do was prove to us that they were employed at a veterinary hospital on the day of the storm. They didn't have to have receipts. It didn't have to be for any specific expense. It was a community grant for those individuals, and that has felt really good. It's not a ton of money, but it's something to to help folks in that area

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