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- About extra-mural studies (EMS)
- EMS requirements
- Information for vet students
- Information for EMS providers
- Information for vet schools
- Temporary EMS requirements
- Practice by students - regulations
- Health and safety on EMS placements
- EMS contacts and further guidance
- Extra-mural studies fit for the future
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- Code of Professional Conduct for Veterinary Surgeons
- Code of Professional Conduct for Veterinary Nurses
- Contact the Advice Team
- XL Bully dog ban
- 'Under care' - new guidance
- Advice on Schedule 3
- Controlled Drugs Guidance – A to Z
- Dealing with Difficult Situations webinar recordings
- FAQs – Common medicines pitfalls
- FAQs – Routine veterinary practice and clinical veterinary research
- FAQs – Advertising of practice names
- GDPR – RCVS information and Q&As
Please complete the Survey of the Professions
3 April 2014
Calling all veterinary surgeons and student, listed and registered veterinary nurses: please complete our Survey of the Professions 2014!
This year the survey, carried out by the Institute for Employment Studies, will only be available online, and all those for whom we have a personal email address (ie not ‘info@’ or similar) have been sent a participation request.
Others will be sent a letter, including the survey URL. Those who do not receive this letter by Monday 14 April should contact Lizzie Lockett, on [email protected] or 020 7202 0725.
The survey also includes a set of questions about 24/7 emergency cover, the answers to which will feed into the Standards Committee’s current evidence-gathering exercise.
The four-yearly, confidential survey provides useful data that helps us to develop policy, plan our activities and respond to questions from stakeholders such as government and the media.
The survey aims to find out more about individuals’ employment type and experiences, working patterns and professional development. It also asks about aspirations for the short- and long-term and current views on the veterinary profession.
Questions are also asked about mental health and well-being, using the Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-Being Scale. These data will be used to track the mental well-being of the profession at a population level over successive years – a process that started with the 2010 survey – which will feed into other valuable work being carried out across the profession.
Finally, the survey includes a set of questions about 24/7 emergency cover, the answers to which will feed into the Standards Committee’s current evidence-gathering exercise.
The deadline for completion of the survey is 30 April 2014.