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6 Positive Outcomes of a One Health Clinic

Last fall, we introduced you to the run by 51ԹϺ Davis , which offers free preventative and clinical care for pets and their owners at two different sites in a community close to our campus. The clinic’s efforts were recently featured on the website of the , a program of the . Here are six reasons why the clinic is receiving national attention.

 

1.  A One Health clinic works for the community.

The clinic began because “the community reached out to the med school… then reached out to request veterinary services,” as a veterinary student at the clinic explains. The students responded to those unique needs.

2.  A One Health clinic broadens professional perspective.

Who says you can’t have it all in career development? A day at the clinic is about “bringing in the animals, bringing in the patients, thinking about how the environment impacts all of that,” according to a medical student.

3.  A One Health clinic joins forces for education.

Students recognize the clinic as a “great opportunity to learn from one another.” Instead of being in separate human or animal “silos” in school, at the clinic students share and build knowledge as peers.

4.  A One Health clinic boosts cultural competency.

When the clinic opens its doors each Sunday, it welcomes everyone in. “We get to see people of different cultures and different backgrounds. It’s been a very unique and great experience for both community members and for us.”

5.  A One Health clinic serves as a role model.

There’s no shortage of “farm-working immigrant communities that are low-income,” as one professor describes Knights Landing, around the nation and world. So it’s possible to watch, learn and get to work making this clinic “not the first student-run clinic with a rural focus, but the first of many.”

6.  A One Health clinic has a lasting effect.

Community members see their world in a different way because of the clinic’s integrated medical care: “Now they can have a holistic view for their health and their animals’ health.”

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Amy Whitcomb is an editor on the web team in Strategic Communications. 

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