The smooth consultation (part 3)
This last section focuses on the importance of teaching...
MSW, PhD
Cindy Adams is Professor in the Department of Veterinary Clinical and Diagnostic Sciences at the University of Calgary, Veterinary Medicine, where she developed and implemented the Clinical Communication Program in Calgary’s new veterinary school. She honed her professional understanding of human-animal relationships serving from 1980-1992 as a social worker in child welfare, women’s shelters and the justice system. Animals were frequently involved in that work. Combining the very different perspectives gained from her experiences in social work and a doctorate in veterinary epidemiology, she became a faculty member at the Ontario Veterinary College, University of Guelph (1996-2006). There she designed and directed the first veterinary communication curriculum in North America and pioneered a research program regarding communication in veterinary medicine.
She helped initiate the Institute for Healthcare Communication, Bayer veterinary communication project. Her research has focused on communication education, veterinary-client communication in large and small animal contexts, animal welfare, companion animal death and human grief. Founder of the International Conference on Communication in Veterinary Medicine, co-author of Skills for Communicating in Veterinary Medicine she has presented widely and advised veterinarians, veterinary practice teams and veterinary educators throughout North America, Europe, Australia and the Caribbean.
아래의 저자가 작성한 기사 및 발행호를 검색해보세요.
This last section focuses on the importance of teaching...
Vet practitioners frequently concentrate on the pet and forget about the owner…
Asking owners open-ended questions, especially at the beginning of a consultation...
As well as listening it is important to actively encourage the client to continue telling their story...
Inclusion of the communication skills in every day practice requires us to move beyond what we do...
One of the key skills in building relationships with others is the use of empathy...
“Know thyself”, Socrates said...
We are convinced that good communication with the pet owners and with the staff...
In the US, there are 3 times more suicides in the veterinary profession than in the average population...
Working as a vet practitioner clearly put us at risk of “compassion fatigue”, a very tricky and devastating disease...