In the United States the degree is either Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM, the most common one) or Veterinary Medical Doctor (VMD, for graduates of The University of Pennsylvania).
doctor of veterinary, bachelor of veterinary science, and animal husbandry degrees
The dog must see a vet, surely there must be a way to overcome the reason stopping a visit to the vet, This poor dog is suffering.
"[v]et" is an abbreviation for "veterinarian" so, yes, you must be a veterinarian to be a vet.
Vets don't need Master's degrees, they need Doctorate degrees (DVM-Doctor of Veterinary Medicine). Technically, they don't need Bachelors degrees for many vet schools either, they just need to pass entry exams, GREs, MCATs, etc. Because those exams require several years of classes (chem, bio, A&P) to prep for anyway, most vet students received BS or BA degrees before Vet school.
Being a vet is just like being a scientist or a surgeon just that a vet treats animals so a vet must also treat the animal as a human and follow the rules closely.
Is it easy being a vet. the reason i want to be a vet is because I really love animals. i was wondering if you could help me on what i need to know?
The rule and politics of a vet, would be based on the individual vet. Most have to be honest about all necessary work, they must comply with the customers wishes and what is best for the animals.Ê
Typically, it is an undergraduate program. The associate and bachelor degrees are undergraduate programs. The master's and doctorate degrees are graduate programs.
There are lots of websites out there for vet degrees that you can obtain online. Previous experience is always a plus, so it helps if you were a vet tech previously. Check out the following link: http://www.avma.org/education/cvea/vettech_programs/vettech_programs.asp.
52
Because the sum of the interior angles of a triangle must equal 180 degrees, the third angle must equal 180-80-60 = 40 degrees.
The old saying is C=DVM; you must maintain a minimum 2.0 at most vet schools to graduate. However, most students maintain closer to a 3.0 throughout vet school.