CPD Tracker
This section of the site is provided to help record your online reading and other CPD activities at Vet Times, and elsewhere. Hours logged here can be counted toward your mandatory CPD requirements – as set out by the RCVS – and gathered together in a single, convenient certificate.
Activities must be archived to count towards your total.
featured cpd material
Gerardo Poli reveals his tried and tested ritual of reseting his composure between consults and emergencies.
In the final post of her blog series, Carly Kilby discusses how she overcame impostor syndrome by proving her worth – not just to the practices she locums for, but to herself – and explains how you can, too.
From unexpectedly welcoming a feline paramour into her home, to providing a fish course for her own cat’s would-be suitor, Jane Davidson introduces us to the “niche product” she finds perfect for disguising unwanted meds.
Hubert Hiemstra reviews the uses and limitations of point-of-care tests for canine C-reactive protein, and asks: “Oh CR*P! What am I missing?”
Following his discussion on the causes of thrombocytopenia, Gerardo Poli advises on ways to manage this condition.
Gerardo Poli on assessing the causes of this condition in canines and methods to diagnose it.
Inspired by her latest PhD topics, Jane Davidson muses over historic veterinary decisions and how the situation appears to be no further forward than it was almost two centuries ago.
Your words and actions make an impact on the people around you, so RVN Carly Kilby encourages you to share your good days with others and highlight all your little wins, claiming “your positivity will rub off on others”.
As she transitions from student blogger to fully-fledged vet blogger, Eleanor Goad considers one of the elements of practice that few graduate vets truly experience before they’re officially “on the job”.
Lactate is the harbinger of doom, according to Hubert Hiemstra – here, he explains why monitoring these levels are important, as well as indications for doing so and what the results mean.