RACE APPROVED: 1.0 Hours for Vet Techs & Vets
No Bunny Panic: The Basics of Rabbit Anesthesia and Analgesia
(RACE 1.0 hrs)
There are many different combinations of pain management for rabbits that can be used
RACE 1.0 Hours for Vet Techs & Vets
RACE Program #: 20-1330336
before, during, and after the procedure. It is also imperative to evaluate each individual patient and the invasiveness of the procedure needed prior to
determining an appropriate plan. Specific monitoring equipment can also be used effectively in these small mammals to allow us to appropriately monitor all vital
signs under anesthesia and troubleshooting techniques are also reviewed. Finally, recovery can be one of the more detrimental phases of any anesthetic event. Methods to appropriately monitor a rabbit patient post-operatively can be impertinent to their overall recovery and prognosis.
RACE 1.0 Hours for Vet Techs & Vets
RACE Program #: 20-1330336
RACE Provider #: 50-36598
Click on the Picture to Enjoy a Brief Course Preview
Meet the Instructor
Liz Vetrano, BS, CVT, VTS (Exotics)
From a young age, Liz started working with animals by volunteering at Woodford Cedar Run Wildlife Refuge in New Jersey throughout high school. She graduated from Towson University with a bachelor’s degree in biology from Towson University in 2009. During that time, she completed an internship at the Philadelphia Zoo and was able to land a job just after graduation as a Children’s Zoo keeper. From there, she became a bird show trainer with Animal Behavior and Conservation Connections.
She continues her work with them outside of veterinary medicine today. The following years, she worked for an avian boarded veterinarian as a technician and became a CVT in 2015. She then migrated over to Mount Laurel Animal Hospital, a large privately-owned referral hospital in South Jersey, to help establish and build their exotics department.
During that time she achieved her VTS in exotics companion animals and supervised multiple departments including exotics as a nursing supervisor.
She continues her work with them outside of veterinary medicine today. The following years, she worked for an avian boarded veterinarian as a technician and became a CVT in 2015. She then migrated over to Mount Laurel Animal Hospital, a large privately-owned referral hospital in South Jersey, to help establish and build their exotics department.
During that time she achieved her VTS in exotics companion animals and supervised multiple departments including exotics as a nursing supervisor.
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