The lowdown on which species veterinarians and veterinary team members prefer to work with, why-and if it matters.
Conventional wisdom holds that when it comes to the veterinary business, it’s a dog’s world. Meaning that the majority of veterinarians and their staff prefer to work with dogs over cats. (Visit dvm360.com/catsvsdogs to read colleagues’ reasons for why that is.) But how accurate is that belief? And if true, what does it mean for your clients and patients?
Data source: 2010 Firstline Team Trends Study
The complete package:
Do you prefer to work with dogs or cats in your practice?
Doctors prefer to work with...
Data source: 2010 Veterinary Economics State of the Industry Study
The complete package:
Do you prefer to work with dogs or cats in your practice?
Doctors prefer to work with...
Cast your vote: Cats vs. dogsIs bias a bad thing?
Not according to Dr. Gary Norsworthy, DABVP, a San Antonio-based feline practitioner. “You need to work with the species that you feel most comfortable with,” he says. Doing so will not only make your own work more enjoyable, it will also better serve your clients and patients.
Canine and feline practice varies significantly, Dr. Norsworthy says, from restraint methods to understanding and treating disease. “Even diseases with the same name will behave differently in dogs and cats,” he says. When you focus on one species, you develop a better set of skills for treating that group. Plus, clients will appreciate your devotion.
So go ahead and stake your claim as the dog whisperer or the go-to cat guru at your practice if you prefer working with one species over the other. But avoid being pigeonholed in that role or labeled as a dog hater or cat hater. Just because you prefer to work with one species over another right now doesn’t mean you always will or that you dislike the other species. And you might not always have the option.
The complete package:
Do you prefer to work with dogs or cats in your practice?
Doctors prefer to work with...
Cast your vote: Cats vs. dogsCats may be beginning to gain ground
“When I graduated from Texas A&M in 1972, most of my classmates came from a rural background where cats were barn creatures and largely disposable. My colleagues couldn’t justify spending money on a cat because they could get a dozen more, and many took that attitude in practice.
But over time, a new generation of veterinarians came into the profession. They were more positive toward cats, probably because they had urban backgrounds and grew up with cats in their households. You can see the shift. When I graduated, there were three feline-only practices in the country. Now there are more than 300.” —Dr. Gary Norsworthy, DABVP
The complete package:
Do you prefer to work with dogs or cats in your practice?
Doctors prefer to work with...
Cast your vote: Cats vs. dogsCast your vote: Cats vs. dogs
Are you Team Fluffy or Team Fido? Tell us why at dvm360.com/catsvsdogs.
The complete package:
Do you prefer to work with dogs or cats in your practice?
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