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What are the differences between veterinary staff positions?

Posted May 31st, 2022 in How To Choose a Vet, Tips & Advice

Every veterinary hospital requires a team of professionals to support the veterinarians and to provide services outside of hands-on medical care. Every member of the veterinary team is essential when it comes to providing top quality care for your pet.

Support Roles & Responsibilities

Whether they deal directly with pet-parents and patients, or work quietly behind the scenes, an exceptional veterinary hospital requires exceptional support staff. This team works together to make you and your pet feel comfortable from the moment you want through the door, ensure that the examination rooms are squeaky clean, and provide direct support to veterinarians during examinations and medical procedures.

Our network of veterinary hospitals across the U.S. are extremely proud of our support staff and the quality of the service they provide to patients and pet-parents each and every day. While not every practice will have a comprehensive support staff, here are a few of the most common professionals you will find at your local PetVet Care Center:

Receptionists

Our Veterinary Receptionists are the first people you will see when you walk through the doors of any of our hospitals. When you first arrive, these professionals will greet you and your pet with a friendly smile, making you feel welcome. Sometimes when you arrive the reception staff will be on calls or attending to other patients, but rest assured that you are important to them and they will take care of your needs as efficiently as possible. Some key responsibilities of veterinary receptionists include answering phones, scheduling appointments, processing new clients and patients, preparing and maintaining medical records, filling prescriptions, over the counter sales, mailing, computer operations, financial transactions, and front office and reception area maintenance.

Office Managers

Veterinary Office Managers are typically responsible for overseeing and coordinating all office administration procedures such as those listed above. They schedule veterinary appointments, bill pet owners, order office supplies as needed, and supervise veterinary receptionists and other office staff.

Practice Managers

Veterinary Practice Managers are responsible for overseeing staff management and client relations. They may, on occasion, handle animals, but their role primarily involves juggling a broad range of duties and responsibilities, including financial reporting, accounts receivable, income reconciliation, credit, accounts payable, inventory, budgeting, and to some extent setting fees, patient medical records oversight and management, client communication, education, interaction, grief protocol, patient, staff comfort, and community involvement (such as participation in fundraising and charity events).

Veterinary Assistants

Veterinary Assistants provide support to veterinarians, as well as veterinary technicians. Depending on State regulations and the veterinary practice itself, these professionals perform many essential tasks throughout a typical day which may include: feeding, weighing, and taking the temperature of animals, giving medication or immunizations, cleaning cages, providing nursing care to animals before and after surgery, maintaining and sterilizing surgical instruments and equipment, cleaning examination and operating rooms, helping provide emergency first aid to sick or injured animals, routine laboratory tests and x-rays, feeding animals, and collecting samples such as blood, urine, or tissue for testing.

Veterinary Technicians

Veterinary Technicians play a vital role in providing veterinarians with the support and information they need to diagnose their patient's conditions. Depending on the Sate and the practice, technicians may perform the following duties within the veterinary practice: assist veterinarians, monitor vital signs, obtain blood, stool, and other samples, test blood, stool, and other samples, take x-rays, prepare animals for surgery, perform dental procedures, provide emergency first aid, restrain animals during exams, administer anesthesia, administer medications and vaccines, and treatments prescribed by the veterinarian.

Veterinary Technician Specialist

Veterinary Technician Specialists are technicians who go on to further veterinary studies within specialized fields. In our network of PetVet Care Centers you may encounter veterinary technicians specializing in any of the following fields: dentistry, anesthesia, internal medicine, emergency and critical care, animal behavior, rehabilitation, ophthalmology, surgery, or diagnostic imaging.

When you visit a PetVet Care Center hospital, you can be confident that each and every member of staff you encounter has a passion for providing patients and pet-parents with the very best in veterinary care, within a warm and friendly environment.

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