Workplace Violence in Veterinary Clinics: How to Protect Your Staff and De-escalate Dangerous Situations
Workplace violence is a rising concern in veterinary clinics, affecting countless professionals every year. Learn how to protect staff, prevent violence, and handle difficult situations with practical strategies for creating safer, more supportive environments for veterinarians and their teams.
Veterinary Profession Under Pressure: Survey Reveals Shocking Client Expectations and Mental Health Struggles
A recent survey of over 6,900 vets highlights the growing challenges in the veterinary industry, from client expectations to mental health struggles. Find out what vets say about the current state of the profession and how the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons (RCVS) plans to address these pressing issues in 2025.
Cat Tales Feline Health Center Opens in Davis, California
Seasoned veterinarians Julie Cole, DVM, DACT, PhD, and her husband, Chris “Shac” Shacoski, DVM, have opened Cat Tales Feline Health Center to redefine northern California’s veterinary landscape by setting a new standard in specialized feline care. Located at 606 W. Covell Blvd. in Davis, they offer state-of-the-art knowledge in feline-only care to provide exceptional medical treatment and concierge-level services, all tailored specifically for cats and the people they own.
Do animals get jealous like people? Researchers say it’s complicated.
In recent years, evolutionary psychologists have suggested that we’re not all that special. Animals, from corvids to capuchin monkeys, express what humans might recognize as jealousy when, for example, they are passed over for a sought-after snack. Many argue this is evidence we are not alone in our aversion toward unfairness.
World’s only bonobo sanctuary helps orphaned apes overcome trauma to develop social skills and empathy
Apes orphaned by the illegal trade in bushmeat and pets can overcome trauma and develop social abilities like those of their mother-reared peers.
A new study led by Durham University, UK, looked at the effects of rehabilitation by the world’s only bonobo sanctuary on the social and emotional development of orphaned bonobo apes across a 10-year period.
Study reveals right whales live 130 years — or more
New research published in Science Advances reveals that right whales can survive for more than 130 years — almost twice as long as previously understood.
Extreme longevity is a trait common to the right whales’ cousins, the bowheads.

