When Veterinarians Support Canine Therapy: Bidirectional Benefits for Clinics and Therapy Programs

This paper proposes a mutually beneficial model of collaboration between veterinarians and canine therapy programs. Veterinarians and the clinics for whom they work routinely establish collaborations with multiple and varied stakeholders. This might include a laboratory for processing samples and th...

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Main Authors: John-Tyler Binfet, Haley J. Silas, Sean W. Longfellow, Katrina Widmaier-Waurechen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-01-01
Series:Veterinary Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2306-7381/5/1/2
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spelling doaj-50e8ceb55f37413d8f4d16b789a0c5bf2021-04-02T08:41:53ZengMDPI AGVeterinary Sciences2306-73812018-01-0151210.3390/vetsci5010002vetsci5010002When Veterinarians Support Canine Therapy: Bidirectional Benefits for Clinics and Therapy ProgramsJohn-Tyler Binfet0Haley J. Silas1Sean W. Longfellow2Katrina Widmaier-Waurechen3Faculty of Education, University of British Columbia, Kelowna, BC V1V 1V7, CanadaFaculty of Arts & Sciences, University of British Columbia, Kelowna, BC V1V 1V7, CanadaFaculty of Arts & Sciences, University of British Columbia, Kelowna, BC V1V 1V7, CanadaFaculty of Arts & Sciences, University of British Columbia, Kelowna, BC V1V 1V7, CanadaThis paper proposes a mutually beneficial model of collaboration between veterinarians and canine therapy programs. Veterinarians and the clinics for whom they work routinely establish collaborations with multiple and varied stakeholders. This might include a laboratory for processing samples and the corresponding courier company needed to deliver samples to the lab or a partnership with a local dog rescue organization for whom discounted rates are offered. One community partnership that stands to benefit both the clinic and the community agency, is for veterinarians to work in tandem with a local canine-assisted therapy program. The benefits to such an alliance are multifold and address aspects of veterinary medicine including client recruitment, community education, and access to a network of devoted dog enthusiasts.http://www.mdpi.com/2306-7381/5/1/2canine therapyclient recruitmentcommunity collaboration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John-Tyler Binfet
Haley J. Silas
Sean W. Longfellow
Katrina Widmaier-Waurechen
spellingShingle John-Tyler Binfet
Haley J. Silas
Sean W. Longfellow
Katrina Widmaier-Waurechen
When Veterinarians Support Canine Therapy: Bidirectional Benefits for Clinics and Therapy Programs
Veterinary Sciences
canine therapy
client recruitment
community collaboration
author_facet John-Tyler Binfet
Haley J. Silas
Sean W. Longfellow
Katrina Widmaier-Waurechen
author_sort John-Tyler Binfet
title When Veterinarians Support Canine Therapy: Bidirectional Benefits for Clinics and Therapy Programs
title_short When Veterinarians Support Canine Therapy: Bidirectional Benefits for Clinics and Therapy Programs
title_full When Veterinarians Support Canine Therapy: Bidirectional Benefits for Clinics and Therapy Programs
title_fullStr When Veterinarians Support Canine Therapy: Bidirectional Benefits for Clinics and Therapy Programs
title_full_unstemmed When Veterinarians Support Canine Therapy: Bidirectional Benefits for Clinics and Therapy Programs
title_sort when veterinarians support canine therapy: bidirectional benefits for clinics and therapy programs
publisher MDPI AG
series Veterinary Sciences
issn 2306-7381
publishDate 2018-01-01
description This paper proposes a mutually beneficial model of collaboration between veterinarians and canine therapy programs. Veterinarians and the clinics for whom they work routinely establish collaborations with multiple and varied stakeholders. This might include a laboratory for processing samples and the corresponding courier company needed to deliver samples to the lab or a partnership with a local dog rescue organization for whom discounted rates are offered. One community partnership that stands to benefit both the clinic and the community agency, is for veterinarians to work in tandem with a local canine-assisted therapy program. The benefits to such an alliance are multifold and address aspects of veterinary medicine including client recruitment, community education, and access to a network of devoted dog enthusiasts.
topic canine therapy
client recruitment
community collaboration
url http://www.mdpi.com/2306-7381/5/1/2
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