
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Guest: Cristie Kamiya is the Chief of Shelter Medicine at Humane Society Silicon Valley. She has worked as a shelter veterinarian in humane societies, municipal shelters, and rescues in the Denver–Boulder areas of Colorado, the greater Phoenix metro area of Arizona, and Northern California. She also completed a 3-year intensive residency-training program in shelter medicine from the University of California-Davis’ School of Veterinary Medicine. In addition to having a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree, she also earned a Master of Business Administration degree from Colorado State University.
Main question: How has your organization addressed foster care challenges during COVID-19?
Takeaways:
* The pandemic (any new challenge) comes with a silver lining. It provides an opportunity to improve programs and services.
* Veterinary care for foster animals can become more efficient through the use of electronic questionnaires and video consultations – these cut down on in-person visits, save time and enable you to serve more animals and foster caregivers.
* BEFORE seeking a solution, making a plan or asking for more volunteers, be sure to get clear on exactly what you are trying to accomplish.
Links:
* Humane Society Silicon Valley https://www.hssv.org
* Webinar on "Scaling High Quality, High Volume Foster Care in Times of Crisis" with Cristie Kamiya https://learning.theaawa.org/p/sheltermed-9-16-20
* Recommendation: "Inside the mind of a master procrastinator" - TED Talk by Tim Urban https://www.ted.com/talks/tim_urban_inside_the_mind_of_a_master_procrastinator
Recorded Sept. 15, 2020
5
66 ratings
Guest: Cristie Kamiya is the Chief of Shelter Medicine at Humane Society Silicon Valley. She has worked as a shelter veterinarian in humane societies, municipal shelters, and rescues in the Denver–Boulder areas of Colorado, the greater Phoenix metro area of Arizona, and Northern California. She also completed a 3-year intensive residency-training program in shelter medicine from the University of California-Davis’ School of Veterinary Medicine. In addition to having a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree, she also earned a Master of Business Administration degree from Colorado State University.
Main question: How has your organization addressed foster care challenges during COVID-19?
Takeaways:
* The pandemic (any new challenge) comes with a silver lining. It provides an opportunity to improve programs and services.
* Veterinary care for foster animals can become more efficient through the use of electronic questionnaires and video consultations – these cut down on in-person visits, save time and enable you to serve more animals and foster caregivers.
* BEFORE seeking a solution, making a plan or asking for more volunteers, be sure to get clear on exactly what you are trying to accomplish.
Links:
* Humane Society Silicon Valley https://www.hssv.org
* Webinar on "Scaling High Quality, High Volume Foster Care in Times of Crisis" with Cristie Kamiya https://learning.theaawa.org/p/sheltermed-9-16-20
* Recommendation: "Inside the mind of a master procrastinator" - TED Talk by Tim Urban https://www.ted.com/talks/tim_urban_inside_the_mind_of_a_master_procrastinator
Recorded Sept. 15, 2020