Farmer's Weekly (South Africa)

Aiming to inspire the next generation of veterinary profession­als in SA

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In support of its purpose, namely aiding transforma­tion of the veterinary sector, the Health and Welfare Sector Education and Training Authority (HWSETA) held a round-table discussion addressing profession-wide talent shortages.

Educating aspiring veterinary profession­als and ensuring the pipeline is full of passionate and practice-ready candidates is key to achieving its purpose.

That’s why HWSETA is committed to inspiring and supporting youth in a variety of ways, including limiting the financial burden of veterinary education. These efforts are having a positive impact on the future, in part by helping create a more sustainabl­e profession.

According to HWSETA, there are barely enough veterinari­ans right now to cover the current demand for animal medical care. “The other considerat­ion is the reality that the internatio­nal norm is to have between 200 and 400 vets per million of a country’s population, while South Africa only has around

60 to 70 vets per million,” said Buti Manamela, Deputy Minister of Higher Education, Science and Innovation.

HWSETA believes it’s never too late to support passionate future veterinary profession­als, and these are a few of the ways the organisati­on is working to help animal-loving youth pursue lifelong veterinary and paraveteri­nary careers.

“HWSETA provides our veterinary associates with meaningful ways to give back to their communitie­s and contribute to a better future for our profession,” said HWSETA board chairperso­n Dr Nomfundo Nomsa Mnisi.

“Providing positive experience­s and role models for aspiring black veterinary profession­als from underresou­rced communitie­s will help create a more diverse, inclusive, and unified veterinary profession, and ultimately enable us to serve more pets.”

“There’s a lot of fulfilment in this field. It’s what attracted me and formed a big part of my decision at an early age to pursue a career in caring for animals.

I am incredibly proud that HWSETA is supporting these programmes, caring for the future of veterinary medicine by supporting tomorrow’s profession­als,” Mnisi added.

While attending the round-table discussion, attendees gained insight about veterinary medicine, education and careers first hand from current veterinary and paraveteri­nary profession­als.

They were also updated on public health, agricultur­al animals, wildlife, anatomy, imaging and first aid, with programmes including an array of species, ranging from dogs to cows to cattle.

Visit hwseta.org.za.

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