Volunteer spotlight

Dr. Scott Zaari, DVM’13


From his international role evaluating veterinary services across South East Asia to running a personal fundraiser in Myanmar for albino elephants, Zaari’s appetite to see the world began at UCalgary when he discovered, “the very unique volunteer opportunities that you can have both as a vet student and as a veterinarian,” he says, adding his first volunteer opportunity was a summer gig at a charitable veterinary organization for working animals in Fez, Morocco. “And now, as I reflect on my current volunteer mentorship work that I do with two students at UCVM, I feel compelled to give back . . . just as faculty do, who give so much of their time and energy to emerging veterinarians,” Zaari, DVM’13, says. “My contribution is but a very small gesture compared to our faculty. Also, I think most vet students do not understand that UCalgary’s veterinary faculty is largely government/publicly-supported and our tuition amount is only a drop in the bucket compared to the total cost of educating a veterinary student, and so, to some extent, I feel obligated to fellow Canadian taxpayers to give back through volunteering whenever possible."

I think volunteers play a more consistent and permanent role in terms of how we function as a society than we know, and also provide a huge contribution to the world.

Dr. Scott Zaari

DVM’13


What is your current volunteer role with the two students at UCVM?

We connect and brainstorm about different career options outside of private practice and, more recently, some different graduate course options for them. It’s been a great opportunity to do some brainstorming around choices, to help with their understanding of what it means to be a non-clinical vet. I try to pass on that knowledge, the good, the bad and ugly to the students as I know it, having only graduated eight years ago.

What do you mean by a non-clinical setting?

Many people in society are unaware of the role that vets can play outside of clinical practice, like I do. Let’s say I am at a party and I tell someone I am a government vet. That person will still likely want me to give them feedback on insulin doses for their cat. That’s when I have to explain that “I’m not the best vet anymore for that advice, but I can tell you a little bit wider issues such as the impact of COVID-19 exposure in cats and dogs and other species, like mink, around the world.” And I could speak to that, or to things like the outbreak response of infectious laryngeal tracheitis in poultry flocks and also about how African Swine Fever virus has devastated global swine populations and spread  across Asia into Europe, and why we’re all concerned about this now in North America . . .

What role do you feel volunteers play in society?

I think, equally important to the act of volunteering is also about how you espouse these values at an individual level on a day-to-day basis in our local and global community. I think volunteers  play a more consistent and permanent role in terms of how we function as a society than we know, and also provide a huge contribution to the world. Volunteering is less about one experience and more about how you live your life and the “volunteerism” values that you espouse on a daily basis.

Reflecting back on your time as a student, what was your favourite hangout on campus?

Sadly, I don’t think I had a favourite hangout, but that maybe suggests a wider reminder to myself and fellow students — that you need to expand your horizons beyond the classroom. I was obsessed with passing and getting my DVM, and that really overshadowed much of my experience with some of my classmates. That’s not to say I didn’t have a good time, but I think it’s a trap that many students fall into today as is the intense focus on grades. This can really impact the mental capacity and energy to do things outside of the classroom which is also a major part of an educational experience.

That said, my favourite group activity was indoor recreational soccer. I was a regular member of the indoor soccer league and we had a vet team that hopefully still exists, so that was an important stress-reliever for me.

If you didn’t have to earn a paycheque for six months, what volunteer work would you do?

I would centre my efforts not internationally, which I’m familiar with at a volunteer level, but I’d focus on how I could contribute here in Canada. I think we need to better support our rural and remote communities, including our Indigenous communities in Canada and provide improved access to veterinary services.

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