Veterinary professionals give so much of themselves every day, often placing their own wellbeing last. Self-care doesn’t have to mean adding more to your to-do list. This webinar focuses on realistic, in-the-moment practices that fit naturally into a busy shift, helping you care for yourself with the same intention you bring to your patients and clients.
Join Dr. Chloe Hannigan, BVetMed MRCVS (RYT-500), FFCP-V, for a one-hour RACE-approved webinar and explore simple, practical ways to support your health and wellbeing during the workday.
You’ll learn:
Common stressors and challenges faced by veterinary team members
Evidence-based benefits of yoga, meditation, and breath work
How these practices can be applied in real veterinary clinic situations
Resources that support taking positive, sustainable action for your wellbeing
The gut does more than digest food—it plays a vital role in how pets experience fear, anxiety, and stress. Understanding the connection between the microbiome, emotional wellbeing, and physical discomfort can transform the way we care for animals.
Join us along with Robin Saar, RVT, VTS (Nutrition), MSc (Candidate), FFCP-V, for a one-hour RACE-approved webinar that uncovers the links between gut health and behavioral and physiological responses in dogs and cats. Discover practical approaches to supporting the microbiome to improve patient care, reduce stress, and enhance overall wellbeing.
Feline behavioral challenges can be complex, and addressing them effectively requires a combination of medical insight, behavior assessment, and practical intervention.
Join us along with Claudia Richter, DVM, DACVB, FFCP-V, for a one-hour webinar, where you’ll explore real-world approaches to managing feline behavior cases and supporting cats and their caregivers in everyday life.”
Veterinary professionals regularly face stressful and emotionally charged situations, which can contribute to burnout, compassion fatigue, and reduced quality of care. This course introduces five practical “60-second stress resets” that can be performed anytime, anywhere, without equipment. Learners will explore the science behind micro-resets, practice each technique, and identify opportunities to apply them in real clinical situations.
This micro-course supports individual well-being, enhances team resilience, and helps maintain patient-centered care by teaching veterinary professionals how to pause, reset, and sustain focus throughout their shifts.
A Fear Free® Approach to Supporting Your Team, Your Patients, and Yourself
A new year brings fresh opportunities to reset routines, strengthen your team culture, and make every patient visit a little calmer. Whether your goal is smoother appointments, a happier team, or simply fewer stressful moments in the day, small, consistent changes can make a big difference. Here are five simple, high-impact ways to reduce stress in your practice in 2026, grounded in Fear Free principles and real-world clinic workflows.
1. Start Every Day with a Quick Team Reset
Before the first appointment, take two minutes for a team check-in. This can be as simple as:
Sharing the day’s patient list and identifying animals who may need extra support
Making sure everyone knows their role for each appointment
Calling out one positive thing from yesterday’s cases
These micro-resets help everyone walk into the day aligned, calm, and ready to create low-stress experiences from the very beginning.
2. Refresh Your Clinic’s Low-Stress Environment
Environment sets the tone, for both pets and people. Choose one small upgrade this month, such as:
Adding soft mats or nonslip surfaces in exam rooms
Refreshing pheromone diffusers
Creating a dedicated “quiet space” for sensitive patients
Reducing clutter or noise in high-traffic areas
Tiny improvements, especially when done consistently, can significantly decrease Fear, Anxiety, and Stress (FAS) for patients and help the team feel more in control.
3. Choose One Handling Habit to Improve This Month
Handling habits shape clinical flow more than we realize. In January, have the whole team pick one Fear Free handling habit to practice daily, such as:
Using treats proactively, not reactively
Letting pets approach on their own terms
Practicing “touch gradients” to prepare for exam steps
Choosing considerate positioning over forceful restraint
A single consistent habit can make exams smoother, shorten appointment times, and reduce the need for escalated restraint or sedation.
4. Implement a Stress-Light Triage in Your Workflow
Adding a quick “stress check” at intake helps the whole day run better. Train front-desk and tech teams to note:
Visible signs of FAS
Patient history of fear or aggression
Possible triggers (e.g., scale, other animals, car rides)
Opportunities for support (pre-visit pharmaceuticals, treats, longer appointment time)
This tiny step allows you to prepare thoughtfully before the pet enters the exam room, improving safety, efficiency, and emotional wellbeing.
5. Commit to One Team Wellness Ritual
A calmer clinic starts with a supported team. Choose one simple ritual to carry through 2026:
A weekly 60-Second Stress Reset together
Mid-day hydration reminders
A “no lunch interruption” policy
A rotating positivity board (gratitude, wins from the week, shout-outs)
When team members feel cared for, they’re more present, more patient, and more equipped to provide Fear Free care.
Start the Year Stress-Free, Stay the Course
Reducing stress in practice doesn’t have to be overwhelming. By focusing on small, intentional changes, your clinic can build momentum and create a calmer, more supportive environment for everyone—pets, clients, and team members alike.
If your practice is looking for more hands-on tools, tips, or training to support a Fear Free start to 2026, explore our upcoming webinars, microlearning sessions, and monthly resources.
Ready to take stress reduction even further? Check out our Fear Free for Humans course and gain practical tools for managing workplace stress, building resilience, and supporting your own wellbeing.
Helping animals with behavior challenges goes beyond addressing what’s obvious; it means understanding how their health and environment shape their actions.
Join us along with Claudia Richter, DVM, DACVB, FFCP-V, for a one-hour RACE-approved webinar, as she’ll guide you through evaluating behavioral cases, identifying potential medical contributors, and applying practical strategies that support both emotional and physical wellbeing.
You’ll learn:
How to recognize behavioral signs that may point to underlying medical issues
How to consider medical differential diagnoses for different behavioral signs
Diagnostic steps to take when a medical disorder is suspected
How to create treatment plans that address both behavioral and medical needs
Multi-cat households can be rewarding but they can also present challenges when cats experience conflict. This webinar provides practical guidance for veterinary teams to support clients in creating peaceful, structured, and stress-free home environments for their cats.
Join Debbie Martin, LVT, VTS (Behavior), FFCP-Elite, KPA-CTP, as she walks through real-world cases, demonstrates practical strategies, and provides actionable guidance for preventing and managing inter-cat conflict.
Caring for birds means more than meeting their basic needs; it requires understanding their natural behaviors and providing enrichment that supports both physical and mental wellbeing.
Join Cassie Malina, CPBT-KA, CPBC, FFCP-T, for a practical, case-based session where she’ll explore ways to create engaging, species-appropriate environments for birds and share practical strategies to support their natural behaviors every day.