Volunteer Opportunities for Veterinary ProfessionalsThere are countless ways that veterinary professionals can volunteer to help animals in need. A good place to start is by contacting your local animal shelter or rescue group to find out how you can help. Offering spay/neuter vouchers, free first exams for adopted animals or even posting adoption flyers in your clinic waiting room are just a few examples. For those who are looking for additional rewarding opportunities beyond your immediate community, listed below are some great ways to get involved in providing direct care to animals in need through a variety of programs run by Humane World for Animals. For those looking to help animals on a larger scale through animal advocacy and outreach, HumaneVMA offers myriad opportunities to help with our advocacy efforts as well as our Speakers Bureau and other outreach activities. DIRECT CARE VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES ADVOCACY AND OUTREACH VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES For more information about these volunteer opportunities, please visit the websites or follow up with contact information included below. For information about volunteering with HumaneVMA, please email [email protected]. HumaneVMA thanks you in advance for your volunteerism and commitment to animal welfare. Rural Area Veterinary Services (RAVS)
WATCH THE RAVS STUDENT INFORMATIONAL SESSION The Rural Area Veterinary Services (RAVS) program combines community service and veterinary mentorship to bring free veterinary services to under-served rural communities where poverty and geographic isolation make regular veterinary care inaccessible. Each year RAVS staff members and more than 350 veterinary and veterinary technician volunteers provide essential veterinary care for more than 8,000 animals, all at no cost to the clients or communities served. In addition the program provides valuable training and experience for hundreds of veterinary students that goes far beyond anything they could learn in a classroom alone. RAVS' teaching programs include training in medicine and surgery as well as community education and recognition of animal health problems in economically disadvantaged populations. Through these efforts, they provide care for animals in need, expand the skills of veterinarians and veterinary technicians and inspire their participation in animal protection efforts. For more information about the RAVS program and to access their clinic schedule, visit www.ruralareavet.org Pets For Life
Pets for Life provides direct care in Philadelphia and Los Angeles, but through its mentorship programs, it’s established an official presence in dozens of cities around the country. By providing additional advocates with a toolkit, webinars, hands-on training and a steady stream of supportive emails and phone calls, it’s helping thousands more pets across the country. To see if there is a Pets for Life program in your community, visit the Where is Pets for Life? webpage. Learn more about this program and how you can volunteer here. Animal Rescue Team
Animal Care Centers
The 1,120-acre Duchess Sanctuary, south of Eugene, Oregon, was established in 2008 as a safe haven for 200 abused or abandoned horses. The first residents were mares and their offspring saved from Canadian farms that collect urine from pregnant horses to sell to pharmaceutical companies for estrogen replacement drugs. Many of the elderly mares had spent six months of the year for decades confined in dark stalls, hooked up to urine collection devices and unable to turn around. Their foals were taken away at 3 months of age, some destined to join the urine-production line, and others sent to slaughter. At the Duchess Sanctuary, these animals have left misery behind and now spend their days grazing, napping and running across green pastures, joined by rescued wild mustangs and horses saved from slaughter. Native wildlife shares the habitat, including California quail, turkey, coyote, black bear, black tail deer and rare Columbian white tail deer. Black Beauty Ranch and Duchess Sanctuary have many volunteer opportunities available. Please refer to their websites for more information. HumaneVMA Advocacy and Outreach
For more information about volunteering with HumaneVMA, contact [email protected].
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