- Client-perpetrated aggression is near-universal: 98.9% verbal abuse; 38.2% threatened; 4.1% harmed; 11.8% stalked.
- Aggression produces persistent psychological symptoms: intrusive thoughts, sleep disturbance, hypervigilance, anxiety; 34.5% considered leaving the profession.
- Significant workplace gaps in policies, training, and mental health support; private practices report more formal measures than corporate settings.
Am J Vet Res. 2026 Jun 23:1-9. doi: 10.2460/ajvr.26.03.0121. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To characterize the nature, frequency, and psychological and behavioral consequences of client-perpetrated aggression among veterinarians and to examine associated workplace policies and training.
METHODS: A cross-sectional, anonymous online survey was distributed through the Veterinary Information Network. Respondents reported lifetime exposure to client verbal abuse, physical threats, physical harm, and stalking behaviors as well as associated psychological symptoms, professional impacts, behavioral adaptations, and workplace factors. Ordinal and binary logistic regression examined predictors of aggression. χ2 tests compared private and corporate practices on policy, training, and leadership response variables.
RESULTS: Nearly all respondents (98.9%) reported lifetime exposure to client verbal abuse. More than one-third (38.2%) had been physically threatened, 4.1% had been physically harmed, and 11.8% reported client stalking. The most prevalent symptoms across aggression types were intrusive thoughts, sleep disturbances, hypervigilance, and anxiety. Over one-third of respondents (34.5%) had considered leaving veterinary medicine as a result of verbal abuse. Female veterinarians reported a higher frequency of verbal abuse and greater likelihood of physical threat. Private practice veterinarians were more likely than those in corporate settings to report formal aggression policies, reporting systems, client dismissal practices, and leadership support.
CONCLUSIONS: Client-perpetrated aggression is a near-universal occupational experience among veterinarians, with substantial and often persistent psychological consequences. Significant gaps exist in workplace infrastructure, training, and mental health support.
CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The findings support the need for profession-wide policy development, de-escalation training beginning in veterinary school, and attention to governance structures in corporate practice that may limit local leadership’s ability to protect staff.
PMID:42335953 | DOI:10.2460/ajvr.26.03.0121
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