In the United States, no - you can go directly from vet school to practicing as a veterinarian in the profession. However, if you want to become board certified, you will typically have to complete a one-year internship before applying for the residency to train for the board certification test.
You have to measure the medicine before giving it to the animal.
A veterinarian is a doctor, and any doctor must complete a PhD. that is 8 years of college, two years of post-doctorate studies and a minimum of two years as an intern. (the amount of time as an intern varies, depending on what specialty, if any, the veterinarian wished to enter.0 Therefor a veterinarian must have completed at least 12 years of higher education to receive his/her license to practice.
http://www.legalworkplace.com/intern-or-employee-you-decide-before-dol-does-pla.aspx
it takes about 2 years before you get paid for being a vet because you have to go to medical school and then you go and register
They wont let you in unless you have some sort of degree OR you are an intern.
its not
it is a nurse who helps the other nurse by being an intern
its the being between the thang with the thangy thang thang
the history of being a vet is that it started long before our auntsesters were born , they started caring about our animals because they needed them for there land to make there crops and stuff.......
the profession of being a veterinarian is that there is always good opportunities for them to be offered and to given to them as a promtion at work in the profession department.
Most veterinarians are paid approximately every two weeks. Given a lag time of one week between the end of a pay period and the paycheck being deposited, a veterinarian can expect his first paycheck approximately three weeks after being hired.
You have to go to school to be one.