Veterinarians often work long hours. Those in group practices may take turns being on call for evening, night, or weekend work; solo practitioners may work extended and weekend hours, responding to emergencies or squeezing in unexpected appointments. The work setting often can be noisy.
Veterinarians in large-animal practice spend time driving between their office and farms or ranches. They work outdoors in all kinds of weather and may have to treat animals or perform surgery under unsanitary conditions. When working with animals that are frightened or in pain, veterinarians risk being bitten, kicked, or scratched.
Veterinarians working in nonclinical areas, such as public health and research, have working conditions similar to those of other professionals in those lines of work. In these cases, veterinarians enjoy clean, well-lit offices or laboratories and spend much of their time dealing with people rather than animals.
Some of the physical skills that a veterinarian will need is the ability to put in long days, and to stand for long periods of time. They also need the strength to hold down or lift animals. Mental skills needed is the ability to handle dealing with sick animals, and the compassion to deal with the animals and their owners.
NOT SURE
dancing
"Assistant veterinarian" is not a title I'm familar with. "Associate veterinarian" is a veterinarian who works at a clinic but is not an owner or part-owner of the clinic; this job has all the difficulties of any veterinary position. "Veterinary assistant" is a lay trained individual who assists the veterinarian with non-technical tasks such as cleaning the exam rooms, moving clients and patients from the reception area to the exam room and back out and other similar tasks. A veterinary assistant's job can be physical demanding but doesn't have the same demands a veterinarian's position does.
There are no specific physical requirements to be a veterinarian, although blind or deaf veterinarians are quite rare. Most other physical disabilities can be managed and worked around because the most important part of a veterinarian's job is to think critically and logically, which is not affected by a physical disability.
tattoo
Everything is needed.
The majority of the work completed by a veterinarian is mental - gathering information, assembling the information into a diagnosis and then planning a response based upon that diagnosis. However, a veterinarian must also be able to complete the physical tasks of the job - performing a physical exam, doing surgery, etc. In most cases, with some thinking and pre-planning, the physical environment can be modified for a veterinarian with physical limitations to still perform his/her job.
Physical demands for a teacher include standing for long periods and moving around the classroom. Emotional demands involve managing stress, staying patient, and building relationships with students. Social demands include interacting with colleagues, parents, and community members.
Physical Fitness
Strong, fit and tough.
you dont. you take it to a local certified veterinarian.