Abstract

As farm animal clinical practice continues to evolve, it is timely to gather expert opinion on and form an evidence base for the practical skill requirements for new graduates entering farm animal practice to ensure that undergraduate training maps to the needs of the profession. Existing lists of practical skills for cattle and sheep were reviewed. Practitioners were recruited from UK farm and mixed veterinarypractices to take part in a Delphi process to gain consensus on the most (and least) important skills for day 1 in practice. The results indicate that students need skills that build trust and credibility with clients, in particular, animal handling, examining and treating sick animals and coping in an emergency until support arrives. Practitioners also acknowledged that new graduates would receive further training once in employment. This study was limited to practical skills,although it was clear from the qualitative data that professional attributes are of key importance to employers and necessary for thesuccess of graduates starting in practice. The findings of this project willenable veterinary educators and practitioners within educational partnerships to review and update current curricula and prioritise teaching of appropriate learning objectives for farm practical skills.

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