A Vet Studying Conflict?
Dr. Courtney gets a lot of questions about how a veterinarian finds herself studying jerks, toxic teams, and workplace conflict. Believe it or not, she feels becoming a veterinarian was the perfect preparation for studying conflict.
- Working in medicine where lives are on the line is often high-stress and high conflict. It also showed her the high costs of destructive conflict. When teams don’t work well together, patients suffer.
- She was able to translate the positive, proactive methods for treating animal aggression into approaches for preventing, triaging, and treating workplace conflict.
- Helping clients consider difficult medical decisions taught her how to research solutions, create practical, evidence-based treatment plans, and communicate using a compelling combination of data and real-life stories.
- She was inspired by the ways veterinarians collaborate across different fields of study. She believes we need a united approach to conflict – creating bridges between the related fields law, mediation, ethics, neuroscience, animal behavior, psychology, business, and the art of communication.
A Vet Studying Conflict?
Dr. Courtney gets a lot of questions about how a veterinarian finds herself studying jerks, toxic teams, and workplace conflict. Believe it or not, she feels becoming a veterinarian was the perfect preparation for studying conflict.
- Working in medicine where lives are on the line is often high-stress and high conflict. It also showed her the high costs of destructive conflict. When teams don’t work well together, patients suffer.
- She was able to translate the positive, proactive methods for treating animal aggression into approaches for preventing, triaging, and treating workplace conflict.
- Helping clients consider difficult medical decisions taught her how to research solutions, create practical, evidence-based treatment plans, and communicate using a compelling combination of data and real-life stories.
- She was inspired by the ways veterinarians collaborate across different fields of study. She believes we need a united approach to conflict – creating bridges between the related fields law, mediation, ethics, neuroscience, animal behavior, psychology, business, and the art of communication.