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Creating Wellbeing and Building Resilience in the Veterinary Profession: A Call to Life [Pehme köide]

(Florida Univ., College of Vet. Med.)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 228 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 360 g, 29 Line drawings, black and white; 4 Halftones, black and white; 33 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Mar-2022
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 0367418797
  • ISBN-13: 9780367418793
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 228 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 360 g, 29 Line drawings, black and white; 4 Halftones, black and white; 33 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Mar-2022
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 0367418797
  • ISBN-13: 9780367418793
Teised raamatud teemal:
A Call to Life aims to help veterinary caregivers increase self-efficacy, decrease unnecessary suffering, and increase sustainability in their mission to support animal health around the world. The veterinary profession is powered by dedicated, bright, and selfless individuals. Unfortunately, the long-standing and dysfunctional culture in classrooms and practices around the world expects veterinary caregivers to be ready to sacrifice everything their time, their health, their personal lives in the name of being deemed qualified and worthy.

Integrating real-life stories from a range of veterinary caregivers with evidence-based theory, practical activities, discussion and reflection points, and insights drawn from the authors own experiences, the book empowers veterinarians by showing that they have the ability and the control to choose a healthier way forward for themselves and for their profession. It describes how to:















Normalize the conversation around mental and emotional health challenges in caregiving environments





Discuss and collaboratively create systemic solutions that promote healthier ecosystems for vets to work within





Develop the skills of reframing, mindfulness, and self-care strategy implementation supporting holistic veterinary well-being





Collectively choose to shift the framework of professional conversations towards psychological safety, optimism, and purpose-driven experiences.





Creating Wellbeing and Building Resilience in the Veterinary Profession: A Call to Life uniquely combines shared experiences (personal stories) with academic research into the contributing factors of compassion fatigue and how to counter these. Normalizing the conversation in the profession, it provides a wide array of possible solutions to build resilience and to shape a culture of collaboration and support where caregivers can flourish.

Arvustused

Sonja Olson, an experienced Emergency Clinician, veterinary mentor, and health and wellbeing trainer of veterinary teams, shares her wisdom, her breadth of experience and knowledge on the topic on wellbeing and resilience in this book. She also brings to life the voices of her colleagues across the globe. By doing so, she normalises conversations around vulnerability and mental health. Sonja "talks the talk" and "walks the walk" and without ego, will show how you too, can have a long and fulfilling professional life and keep a personal life too. This book brings to the reader both knowledge and experience that is useful to those studying and practicing in the veterinary profession. This will be a valuable addition to veterinarians, veterinary technicians, veterinary nurses and veterinary paraprofessionals.

Dr Vanessa Rohlf, BA(Hons), MCouns&PsychTh, PhD, Counsellor, Psychotherapist, and Research Fellow

This is a great book for the vet community. Its chock full of models, resources, questions, practices and personal anecdotes from those on the front lines. We all want to feel seen and heard, that someone understands us, and Sonja does a great job with that, normalizing the experience of the reader. I especially appreciated the understanding and compassion for what clients are experiencing, which might also help for us to understand why they sometimes say and do the things they do. Part textbook, part self-help, this is the ideal book for any veterinary professional.

Julie Squires, Certified Compassion Fatigue Specialist and Certified Life Coach, Rekindle, LLC

Dr. Sonja Olsons passion is helping veterinarians thrive, and she is at the forefront of a grassroots movement to improve the well-being of both individual practitioners and the profession. A Call To Life takes a much-needed, comprehensive look at the unspoken codes and culture of veterinary education and practice. Using humor and compassion, Dr. Olson charts a path forward to new era of veterinary practice, one where veterinarians can flourish both at work and at home. This book is essential reading for every practitioner and student.

Karen R. Fine, DVM, Author, Narrative Medicine in Veterinary Practice, October 2021

This book makes some big - and sometimes hard to hear - points without lecturing: instead, it feels like having a heartfelt, non-judgmental conversation. It recognizes that while a good deal of the onus is on us to change our perspective, there are outside forces beyond our control (forces identified and addressed with as much care and importance). Reading this book is an emotional rollercoaster, but it ends on an optimistic and positive note without being stifling or overwhelming. A Call to Life is something we need early on in vet school: it would have changed my experience so much.

Veterinary Surgeon and Veterinary Rehabilitation Practitioner, BVM&S, MRCVS, Arizona, USA

Meeting Sonja and reading Creating Well-being and Building Resilience in the Veterinary Profession: A Call to Life is a life-changer for me. Just when I thought I knew it all, Sonja entered my world and taught me more, much much more. She deep dives into what makes us tick as vet pros, naming to tame the occupational hazards we encounter through all walks of vet life, our complex challenges as an industry, and what toolboxes are available for an individual approach to building personal optimal well-being. For me, it is like having a personal care Merck Veterinary Manual at my fingertips for help with daily diagnosis, therapies to consider, further readings, and continued success to remain a healer in the profession I love. I would recommend it to everyone in the profession to pop on your self-help shelf. A really lovely and personal read, with so much input from so many in the profession who are doing great work for change, from someone with so much heartfelt aroha. Well done Sonja!

Megan Alderson, BVSc, Veterinary Professional Wellbeing Advocate, vetThrive, The Strand Veterinarian in Parnell, Auckland, New Zealand Sonja Olson, an experienced Emergency Clinician, veterinary mentor, and health and wellbeing trainer of veterinary teams, shares her wisdom, her breadth of experience and knowledge on the topic on wellbeing and resilience in this book. She also brings to life the voices of her colleagues across the globe. By doing so, she normalises conversations around vulnerability and mental health. Sonja "talks the talk" and "walks the walk" and without ego, will show how you too, can have a long and fulfilling professional life and keep a personal life too. This book brings to the reader both knowledge and experience that is useful to those studying and practicing in the veterinary profession. This will be a valuable addition to veterinarians, veterinary technicians, veterinary nurses and veterinary paraprofessionals.

Dr Vanessa Rohlf, BA(Hons), MCouns&PsychTh, PhD, Counsellor, Psychotherapist, and Research Fellow

This is a great book for the vet community. Its chock full of models, resources, questions, practices and personal anecdotes from those on the front lines. We all want to feel seen and heard, that someone understands us, and Sonja does a great job with that, normalizing the experience of the reader. I especially appreciated the understanding and compassion for what clients are experiencing, which might also help for us to understand why they sometimes say and do the things they do. Part textbook, part self-help, this is the ideal book for any veterinary professional.

Julie Squires, Certified Compassion Fatigue Specialist and Certified Life Coach, Rekindle, LLC

Dr. Sonja Olsons passion is helping veterinarians thrive, and she is at the forefront of a grassroots movement to improve the well-being of both individual practitioners and the profession. A Call To Life takes a much-needed, comprehensive look at the unspoken codes and culture of veterinary education and practice. Using humor and compassion, Dr. Olson charts a path forward to new era of veterinary practice, one where veterinarians can flourish both at work and at home. This book is essential reading for every practitioner and student.

Karen R. Fine, DVM, Author, Narrative Medicine in Veterinary Practice, October 2021

This book makes some big - and sometimes hard to hear - points without lecturing: instead, it feels like having a heartfelt, non-judgmental conversation. It recognizes that while a good deal of the onus is on us to change our perspective, there are outside forces beyond our control (forces identified and addressed with as much care and importance). Reading this book is an emotional rollercoaster, but it ends on an optimistic and positive note without being stifling or overwhelming. A Call to Life is something we need early on in vet school: it would have changed my experience so much.

Veterinary Surgeon and Veterinary Rehabilitation Practitioner, BVM&S, MRCVS, Arizona, USA

Meeting Sonja and reading Creating Well-being and Building Resilience in the Veterinary Profession: A Call to Life is a life-changer for me. Just when I thought I knew it all, Sonja entered my world and taught me more, much much more. She deep dives into what makes us tick as vet pros, naming to tame the occupational hazards we encounter through all walks of vet life, our complex challenges as an industry, and what toolboxes are available for an individual approach to building personal optimal well-being. For me, it is like having a personal care Merck Veterinary Manual at my fingertips for help with daily diagnosis, therapies to consider, further readings, and continued success to remain a healer in the profession I love. I would recommend it to everyone in the profession to pop on your self-help shelf. A really lovely and personal read, with so much input from so many in the profession who are doing great work for change, from someone with so much heartfelt aroha. Well done Sonja!

Megan Alderson, BVSc, Veterinary Professional Wellbeing Advocate, vetThrive, The Strand Veterinarian in Parnell, Auckland, New Zealand

This is a necessary book for the veterinary community. In a time where the role of veterinarians and veterinary caregivers extends beyond the exam room, this simple yet informative book creates a living narrative in which readers can relate. In six easy-to-read, informative chapters, this book takes readers on a journey in the cultivation of self-awareness, self-worth, and self-compassion.The author comments that this book is not the end-all-be-all of the pathway to mental wellbeing, but that it can help readers to develop and implement their own skills of reframing, mindfulness, and care strategies specific to the wellbeing of the veterinary community. Danielle E Strahl-Heldreth, BS, MSEd, DVM, MSVMS, DACVAA, University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine

Foreword xiii
Author xvii
Illustrator
xix
Introduction xxi
Chapter 1 The Evolution of the Veterinary Profession: How Did We Get Here?
1(18)
Our Shared History
1(3)
Modern Day Definition of Veterinary Medicine in Wikipedia (2020)
3(1)
The Human-Animal Bond of Today
4(6)
One Caregiving Approach (or Way of Thinking) Does not Fit All
7(1)
Companion Animal Medicine (Cats, Dogs, Birds, Small Mammals, Reptiles)
7(1)
Equine Medicine/Surgery
8(1)
Food Animal Production
8(1)
Military/Police Dogs
9(1)
Zoo/Wildlife Medicine
9(1)
Laboratory/Research Animals
10(1)
Understanding Our Past and Clarifying Our Present Experiences
10(4)
Intentionally Creating Our Future
14(3)
Notes
17(2)
Chapter 2 Caregiver Concerns
19(18)
Vocabulary
20(6)
Rumination (vs. Reflection)
20(1)
Emotional Labor
20(2)
Stress
22(1)
Embodied Symptoms of Stress
22(1)
Eustress (vs. Distress)
23(1)
Health Benefits of Experiencing "Eustress" on Physiology
23(1)
Consequences of Distress on Physiology
23(2)
Psychological Distress and Suicide (or Suicidal Ideation)
25(1)
Work-Related Traumatic Stress
25(1)
Compassion Fatigue vs. Empathic Distress
26(7)
Compassion Fatigue
26(1)
Empathic Distress
27(1)
Empathic vs. Empathetic?
28(1)
Burnout
28(2)
Burnout as a Concern in Today's World and Steps Toward Relief
30(3)
Moral Dilemmas/Injury vs. Ethical Conflict and Exhaustion
33(1)
Bioethics
33(1)
Notes
34(3)
Chapter 3 Being Part of a Compassionate Caregiving Community-- for Better or for Worse! Examination of Our Veterinary Professional Challenges
37(70)
Accountability and Safety
38(9)
Professional Identity Formation and Its Impacts on Clinical Practice and Culture
39(1)
Student/House Officer Stage of Professional Development
39(4)
Veterinary Classroom Culture
43(1)
Novice Professional Phase and Professional Development
44(3)
Specific Veterinary Workplace Concerns for Veterinary Professionals
47(4)
Small Animal/Companion Animal Medicine (GP and ER)
48(1)
Large Animal Medicine
49(1)
Poultry Medicine
49(1)
Lab Animal Medicine
50(1)
Zoo and Conservation Medicine
50(1)
Academia
50(1)
Concerns for All Veterinary Profession Segments
51(28)
Professional Colleague Relationships/Communications
51(1)
Schedule Issues
52(2)
Client Relationships
54(1)
Exploring the Impact of Technology on the Veterinary Profession
55(1)
Patient Information Management Systems and Medical Records
56(2)
Impact of Social Media
58(2)
Telemedicine--Impacts on the Veterinary-Client-Patient Relationship and on Veterinary Practice
60(3)
Financial Concerns Impacting Veterinary Wellbeing
63(1)
Income Potential vs. Debt
63(6)
Dealing with Clients and Money
69(4)
Euthanasia as a Part of Our Veterinary Oath to Relieve Animal Suffering
73(2)
Trauma as Part of Our Caregiving Landscape
75(2)
Trauma-Informed Care
77(2)
Veterinary Professionals--Common Personality Traits That Can Get in Our Way of Flourishing
79(10)
Perfectionism and "Hyper-acheiver" Personalities in Veterinary Medicine
80(1)
Imposter Syndrome
81(4)
People-Pleasing (and Over-Identification with Our Roles)
85(1)
Barriers to Help-Seeking
86(3)
Knowledge is Power: Clarifying Mental Health Challenges for Veterinary Caregivers
89(15)
Empathic Distress in Veterinary Caregivers Compared to Other Caregivers
89(2)
Stress/Distress
91(1)
Moral Stressors and Ethical Conflict in Veterinary Medicine
92(3)
Now That We Know, How Do We Grow? Opportunities to Better Navigate Moral Stressors and Ethical Conflicts in Veterinary Medicine
95(1)
For the Global Veterinary Community
95(2)
Substance Use Disorder
97(2)
Suicidal Ideation and Suicide in the Veterinary Profession
99(1)
What We Know about Suicide in the Veterinary Profession
100(2)
Resources and Compassionate Help for Individuals in Crisis
102(2)
Notes
104(3)
Chapter 4 Tailoring Your Individual Toolbox for Self-Care and Resilience Development
107(36)
Consequences of Poor Health: "Why Does It Matter?"
108(6)
Self-Compassion--It Starts with You
110(1)
Self-Care is the Core of the Self-Kindness Realm
111(2)
Self-Care Assessment
113(1)
Wellbeing Toolbox Building Time!
114(27)
Sleep Hygiene
114(2)
Coping Mechanisms and Strategies
116(1)
Assessment of Your Current Coping Strategies
117(1)
Evaluating and Updating Your "Coping Toolbox"
117(2)
Cognitive Reframing
119(1)
Utilizing Reframing to Transform Conflict
120(1)
Developing and Fortifying Resilience
121(4)
Boundaries--an Essential Element in Self-Care and Replenishment
125(1)
Healthy Boundary Creation--the "What" and the "How"
126(2)
Conflict Styles--Based on the Thomas Killman Conflict Modes Model
128(2)
Work-Life Balance vs. Integration
130(3)
Creating the Plan That Is Best for You!
133(1)
Mindfulness As a "Superpower"
134(1)
Thinking vs. Awareness
134(1)
Impacts of Practicing Mindfulness
135(1)
Practices That Support Development of Our "Mindfulness Muscles"
136(3)
Impacts of Micro-Breaks
139(2)
Notes
141(2)
Chapter 5 Change Is in the Wind--A New Framework
143(14)
Compassion Satisfaction
145(2)
Positive Psychology--Supporting Flourishing in Our Lives
147(3)
Eudaimonia
150(5)
Notes
155(2)
Chapter 6 Get Excited and Inspired! The Veterinary Profession of the Future
157(30)
The Written Word
158(2)
Creative Endeavors and the Spoken Word
158(1)
Creature Conserve--Conservation and Education through Art
158(1)
Web-Based Community Support and Virtual Learning for Veterinary Communities
158(1)
Podcasts
158(2)
Forums for Discussion, CE, and "Toolbox Building" for All Veterinary Professionals
160(1)
Curriculum and Classroom Culture Changes: Dream to Match the Need
160(1)
In Veterinary Training
160(3)
Professional Development for Veterinary Teams
163(1)
Virtual Conferences and Learning
164(1)
The Novice Professional Experience and Peer-Mentoring
164(1)
EI & D Efforts--Increasing and Supporting Diversity in the Veterinary Profession
165(1)
Organizational Support
166(1)
Organizational Changes in House Officer Training Structure/Content/Experience
166(1)
Health and Wellbeing Certifications
166(2)
Programs with Curriculum Content for All Caregivers
167(1)
Leadership Development with Culture in Mind
168(2)
Global Veterinary Wellbeing CE Efforts
170(2)
Canada
170(1)
Australia
171(1)
United Kingdom
172(1)
United States
172(1)
Social Work Support for the Veterinary Profession
172(2)
Decreasing Stigma around Mental Health and Substance Abuse Disorder/Alcoholism
174(1)
Suicide Awareness and Support
174(1)
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR)
175(1)
Be the Change You Want to See in the World
176(9)
Parting Thought: Let's Live into the Spirit of Ubuntu
185(2)
Appendix 1 Additional Resources 187(4)
Appendix 2 Uncle Mikey's Maxims 191(2)
Recommended Readings 193(2)
Facilitator's Guide 195(4)
Acknowledgments 199(2)
Index 201
Dr. Sonja Olson grew up with her human and animal family members mostly in Maryland, but every summer included time with family in Wisconsin as well. She graduated from Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine with a focus on exotic animal medicine. Her professional path led to over 25 years of practicing clinical small animal and exotic emergency medicine in both private and corporate practice environments. The myriad of opportunities to teach, mentor, and lead that arose during these years were deeply fulfilling but there was also an increased awareness of the far-reaching need for veterinary well-being awareness and skills. This combination fostered Sonjas passion to better understand, and then support, the holistic health of the veterinary caregivers. She is now focusing her energy on being a health & well-being trainer for veterinary associates through her current work role, podcasts, writing, and collaborative efforts with other like-minded souls. Creating awareness, heightening knowledge, and building compassionate communities will serve as the foundation for a thriving future veterinary profession. Re-energizing for herself comes from enjoying play time with her husband and furry kids, dark chocolate, yoga, running, and deepening her vipassana meditation practices.