University of Liverpool and CVS to conduct largest ever study on veterinary workplace injuries
CVS is funding a research project at the University of Liverpool to understand more about veterinary workplace injuries and what can be done to prevent them, to improve the safety of the veterinary profession.
The veterinary industry is considered one of the most dangerous professions to work in. In the USA, it is the fifth highest profession for non-fatal injuries, with equine veterinarians sustaining an average of eight serious injuries during their career. These injuries can significantly impact the health and well-being of veterinary professionals and are often preventable.
‘The context, consequence and prevention of veterinary workplace injuries: a qualitative and quantitative study in the UK’ will be undertaken at the University of Liverpool in collaboration with CVS colleagues as part of its Clinical Research Awards. Starting earlier this year, it will run over the course of three years, supported by £74,400 of CVS funding.
The research will investigate what veterinary injuries are, what context they occur in and what their consequences are. It will look to highlight areas of the profession where injury prevention training and strategies can be developed and adopted to improve the safety of working in veterinary practice.
As a first stage, this November University of Liverpool researchers have rolled out the largest ever survey to explore veterinary workplace injuries with over 5,000 CVS staff UK-wide. The survey explore how veterinary professionals define injuries, their specific causal mechanisms, and why individuals do or do not report injuries or seek medical treatment. Following this an independent audit of CVS’ full accident reporting system ‘Safety Hub’ will occur. The results of these two activities will lead to the development of a suite of industry leading ‘open access’ educational tools aimed at promoting injury awareness and prevention to help drive behaviour change and support injury avoidance.
The research project is being led by Dr. John Tulloch, a Research Fellow and European Specialist in Veterinary Public Health, at the University of Liverpool. His body of work focuses on how animals impact human health and society, including injuries to veterinary students, zoonotic infections, and dog-bite injuries. Collaborators will also include CVS Head of Health and Safety Rebecca Jackson and Director of Learning, Education and Development Dr Martin Whiting.
Dr. John Tulloch, at the University of Liverpool, said:
Dr. Imogen Schofield, Veterinary Statistician and Epidemiologist at CVS, said:
CVS Clinical Research Awards were launched in January 2022 and are an industry first; offering funding for research undertaken by its employees and research undertaken by universities. The awards support clinical veterinary research which has a direct clinical benefit to animals and which will impact upon veterinary practice. ‘The context, consequence and prevention of veterinary workplace injuries: a qualitative and quantitative study in the UK’ is one of 16 projects CVS has funded since its awards were launched.
Find out more about the CVS Clinical Research Awards and how to apply. Find out more about CVS’s sustainability strategy and ongoing One Health Workstreams
CVS Group operates across small animal, farm animal, equine, laboratories and crematoria, with 473 veterinary practices and referral centres in the UK, the Republic of Ireland and the Netherlands. In the last five years the company has invested nearly £80 million in its sites, facilities and equipment, in addition to industry leading training and support, to give the best possible care to animals.