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Encyclopedia > Veterinary technician

A veterinary technician (also called a vet tech), is a person trained and licensed to assist veterinarians. Their job is similar to that of a nurse. Look up veterinarian in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ... This article is about the occupation. ...

Contents

Job description

Common tasks performed by a veterinary technician include taking histories, providing treatment to routine problems, and giving counseling to clients. Technical skills include venipuncture, collecting urine, performing skin scrapings, performing routine lab procedures and tests in hematology, chemistry, microbiology, urinalysis, and serology. They assist the veterinarian with physical examinations that help determine the nature of the illness or injury. Veterinary technicians also administer medications, anesthesia, and blood products to the animals as prescribed by the veterinarian. Tasks in patient care include recording temperature, pulse and respiration, dressing wounds, applying splints and other protective devices, and cleaning teeth. They perform catheterizations, both urinary and venous, earflushes, intravenous feedings, and tube feedings. Equipment use includes operating electrocardiographic and radiographic equipment. Veterinary technicians commonly assist veterinarians in surgery by providing correct equipment and instruments and by assuring that monitoring and support equipment such as anesthetic machines, cardiac monitors, scopes and breathing apparatus are in good working condition. They also maintain treatment records and inventory of all pharmaceuticals, equipment and supplies. Venipuncture using a vacutainer. ... Hematology (American English) or haematology (British English) is the branch of biology (physiology), pathology, clinical laboratory, internal medicine, and pediatrics that is concerned with the study of blood, the blood-forming organs, and blood diseases. ... Biochemistry is the study of the chemical processes and transformations in living organisms. ... An agar plate streaked with microorganisms Microbiology is the study of microorganisms, which are unicellular or cell-cluster microscopic organisms. ... A urinalysis (or UA) is an array of tests performed on urine and one of the most common methods of medical diagnosis. ... Serology is the scientific study of blood serum. ... Look up veterinarian in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ... Veterinary anesthesia is anesthesia performed on animals (excluding humans) performed by a veterinarian. ... Splint may mean: Splint (programming tool), a tool for checking computer programs Splint (medicine), a medical device for the immobilisation of limbs or spine This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ... Catheter disassembled In medicine, a catheter is a tube that can be inserted into a body cavity, duct or vessel. ... ECG may also refer to the East Coast Greenway Lead II An Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG, abbreviated from the German Elektrokardiogramm) is a graphic produced by an electrocardiograph, which records the electrical voltage in the heart in the form of a continuous strip graph. ... Radiography is the creation of radiographs, photographs made by exposing a photographic film or other image receptor to X-rays. ... Anaesthetists use anaesthetic machines to support the administration of anaesthesia. ...


Veterinary technicians are very different from veterinary assistants, because veterinary assistants have not been properly trained to perform many of the tasks that veterinary technicians can nor do they have specific education in this field. Assistants typically have only a high school diploma or GED, but some may have limited college experience or be in school studying to become a board certified technician. A high school diploma is a diploma awarded for the completion of high school. ... The GED, General Educational Development, or General Equivalence Degree Test, is a test that certifies the taker has attained American or Canadian high school-level academic skills. ...


Education

The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) is responsible for accrediting schools with either a 2-year Associate's degree or a 4-year Bachelor's degree. The organization just recently started to accredit schools that offer distance education. As a requirement of AVMA-accreditation, all distance learning programs require a significant amount of practical clinical experience before the student will be allowed to graduate. Clinical experience is usually obtained by employment or volunteer hours at an animal clinic. Preceptors must be a veterinarian or a credentialed vet technician and are required to instruct and sign off on clinical tasks and then submit the records to the school for approval while some tasks are required to be videotaped and submitted to the school for grading. All distance-learning students in an AVMA-accredited program are held to the same standards as on-campus students in order to be eligible for graduation. The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA), founded in 1863, is a not-for-profit association representing more than 73,000 US veterinarians working in academia, private and corporate practice, industry, government, and uniformed services. ... Accreditation is a process by which a facilitys services and operations are examined by a third-party accrediting agency to determine if applicable standards are met. ... Students in Rome, Italy. ... An associate degree is an academic degree awarded by community colleges, junior colleges, business colleges and some bachelors degree-granting colleges and universities upon completion of a course of study usually lasting two years. ... For other degrees, see Academic degree. ... // Distance Education is a field of expertise exploring situations in which the learner and the teacher are separated in time, space or both. ...


Different states have different titles for veterinary technicians. Some call them Registered Veterinary Technician (RVT), some, Certified Veterinary Technician (CVT), and still others Licensed Veterinary Technician (LVT). However, graduates of any AVMA accredited program may take a national certification exam (and in some states a state exam and/or references are required as well) and, upon passing, become certified/registered/licensed in any state. The technician is then subject to the regulations of the state Veterinary Medical Practice Act of the state she or he practices in.

Look up Veterinary technician in
Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

In the United Kingdom veterinary technicians are known as Veterinary Nurses (VNs). The Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons awards the veterinary nursing qualification and maintains a statutory list of veterinary nurses. VNs on the list are entitled by law to give animals medical treatment, and carry out certain minor surgery, under veterinary direction. Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Wiktionary (a portmanteau of wiki and dictionary) is a multilingual, Web-based project to create a free content dictionary, available in over 150 languages. ... The Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons is the regulatory body for veterinary surgeons in the United Kingdom. ...


Many are employees are self proclaimed or called "Veterinary Technician" but are not. To be a "Technician" one must be Certified, Registered, or Licensed (varies by state). To become a Certified/Registered/Licensed Vet Tech you must attend a 2 year accredited school, obtain an Associates in Vet. Technology and pass your states' board exam (some states allow on the job training, usually five years, to substitute for a degree then require sitting for the National Boards). Vet Assistants are different than a licensed/registered/certified technician. Vet Assistants cannot legally perform as many procedures as a technician can.


Veterinary Technician Oath

"I solemnly dedicate myself to aiding animals and society by providing excellent care and services for animals, by alleviating animal suffering, and promoting public health. I accept my obligations to practice my profession conscientiously and with sensitivity, adhering to the profession's Code of Ethics, and furthering my knowledge and competence through a commitment to lifelong learning."


See also

Look up veterinarian in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ... Veterinary medicine is the application of medical, diagnostic, and therapeutic principles to companion, domestic, exotic, wildlife, and production animals. ... It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Veterinarian. ...

References

External links

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Resources


  Results from FactBites:
 
Veterinary technician - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (378 words)
A veterinary technician (also called a vet tech), is a person trained and licensed to assist veterinarians.
The technician is then subject to the regulations of the state Veterinary Medical Practice Act of the state she or he practices in.
In the United Kingdom veterinary technicians are known as Veterinary Nurses (VNs).
Veterinary Technician and Technology Career, Job and Training Information (1255 words)
Veterinary technologists and technicians are also employed in research centers where they give medications orally and topically, record genealogical information, weigh animals, and document pain and stress levels of research animals.
Veterinary technologists and technicians employed at research centers are supervised by doctors, lab technicians, and veterinarians.
Veterinary technologists and technicians will also be able to find an increasing number of jobs in wildlife facilities, animal control facilities, human societies, diagnostic laboratories, biomedical facilities, food safety inspection facilities, and drug manufacturing companies.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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