The Veterinary Viewfinder Podcast
Dr. Ernie Ward and Beckie Mossor, MPA, RVT, have co-hosted their award-winning weekly veterinary podcast since 2016. Each week, they “tackle the toughest topics in veterinary medicine,” highlighting controversial issues and trending news, introducing veterinary key opinion leaders and provocateurs, and offering solutions to the myriad challenges facing the veterinary profession.
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Does Veterinary Medicine Have an Identity Crisis?
What does it mean to be a veterinarian, a credentialed veterinary technician, an assistant, or a new role entering the clinical space?
In this episode, Dr. Ernie Ward and Beckie Mossor, MPA, RVT, dig into veterinary medicine’s identity problem: how comparisons to human medicine, unclear titles, internal hierarchies, and emerging roles like Colorado’s veterinary professional associate (VPA) can shape how teams see themselves and each other.
They talk candidly about why “more than” or “less than” language can create competition rather than confidence, how that trickles down through the clinic, and why role clarity matters for morale, collaboration, and long-term career satisfaction.
This conversation is especially relevant for veterinarians, vet techs, assistants, practice managers, and anyone navigating scope-of-practice debates or changing team structures.
Ernie and Beckie make the case for being proud of your role without needing to compare it to someone else’s, and for building clinic cultures where every team member understands their value.
The Veterinary Urgent Care Gap We Can’t Ignore
After-hours and urgent care have changed dramatically in veterinary medicine, but the system still has serious gaps. In this episode, Dr. Ernie Ward and Beckie Mossor, MPA, RVT, look at what happens when pet owners need help after hours and there’s nowhere realistic to send them.
The conversation starts with the old model of pagers, late-night calls, and general practices carrying emergency responsibility. Then it moves into today’s urgent care boom, the difference between true urgent care and walk-in sick visits, and the strain this puts on veterinary teams.
But this episode also widens the lens beyond dogs and cats. Horses, rabbits, guinea pigs, hedgehogs, birds, and other companion animals are often left with even fewer options, especially when emergencies happen outside normal clinic hours.
Ernie and Beckie talk honestly about sustainability, affordability, team burnout, and why expanding care may be both a challenge and an opportunity for the profession.
Hantavirus, Hype, and the Future of Client Trust
In this episode of The Veterinary Viewfinder, Dr. Ernie Ward and Beckie Mossor, MPA, RVT, use the current Hantavirus conversation as a jumping-off point for a bigger issue affecting every veterinary team: public trust in science.
This is not a panic episode, and it is not about predicting another COVID. Instead, it is a practical conversation about science skepticism, vaccine hesitancy, misinformation, and what all of that may mean for veterinary medicine going forward.
Ernie and Beckie talk through how fear spreads, why social media noise often drowns out calm expert guidance, and why veterinary professionals may increasingly find themselves answering client questions tied to public health, animals, and trust. They also explore the role of vet teams as credible, steady voices in a confusing information landscape.
If you work in a vet clinic, this episode will help you think about client communication, One Health awareness, and how to respond when public uncertainty spills into everyday veterinary practice.
Veterinary Receptionist Week: The Team That Keeps Your Day on Track
This week on Veterinary Viewfinder, Dr. Ernie Ward and Beckie Mossor, MPA, RVT, focus on Veterinary Receptionist Week (April 19–25, 2026) and the people who hold the entire clinic together from the front desk.
They break down what veterinary receptionists actually do day to day, from triaging calls and managing the schedule to handling emotional clients and keeping patient flow on track. It’s a role that’s often underestimated, but as they point out, even the best clinical team struggles if the front desk isn’t supported.
The conversation goes beyond recognition and into what real appreciation looks like.
They share simple, practical ways to make it meaningful, like handwritten notes, personal recognition, and taking pressure off the phones during the workday. They also touch on training, professional development, and why the human side of this role won’t be replaced anytime soon, even as technology evolves.
If you work in a clinic, this episode is a reminder to slow down, notice the work happening up front, and use this week as a chance to reset how your team shows appreciation.
Vet Tech Advocacy Evolves: Inside the AACVT Movement
In this episode, Dr. Ernie Ward talks with co-host Beckie Mosser, MPA, RVT, about the launch of the American Association of Credentialed Veterinary Technicians (AACVT.org), a new organization she co-founded with Ryan Frazier, LVT, BS, MBA. Their goal is not to replace or compete with existing veterinary groups, but to strengthen the profession by filling gaps that many credentialed technicians still experience.
Becky and Ryan built AACVT around a simple idea: the profession needs more support, more tools, and more ways for technicians to take action, especially at the state level. Rather than focusing only on awareness, AACVT is designed to provide practical resources, advocacy guidance, and a centralized space where technicians and veterinary teams can connect and grow.
The conversation highlights a shift in mindset. This is about adding capacity, not dividing it. By working alongside existing organizations and empowering individuals, AACVT aims to raise the overall standard for technician utilization, recognition, and professional development.
For veterinarians, veterinary technicians, and practice leaders, this episode offers a clear look at how collaboration, not competition, may drive the next phase of progress in veterinary medicine.
Clocked In Isn’t Ready: The Morning Mistake Hurting Your Team
What does “starting at 8 a.m.” actually mean in a veterinary clinic? This episode tackles a small detail that quietly creates big tension across teams.
Dr. Ernie Ward and Beckie Mossor, RVT, break down the difference between being “on time” and being truly ready to work. From employees easing into the day to clinics that aren’t operational at opening, they unpack how unclear expectations lead to frustration, resentment, and inconsistent culture.
They also flip the conversation. It’s not just about employees showing up earlier. It’s about management designing schedules that make success possible. If appointments start at 8:00 am but prep isn’t done, the system is already broken.
This episode offers practical ways to rethink start times, prep workflows, and team expectations without falling back on rigid rules or burnout culture. It also challenges the idea that “early and late” equals a good employee.
If your mornings feel chaotic, rushed, or quietly tense, this conversation will hit close to home and give you a better way forward.
Beckie Mossor, RVT: 24 Seconds That Changed Everything - In Her Own Words
This week’s episode is one of the most difficult and important conversations we’ve had. Beckie Mossor shares the reality of a devastating house fire that took a friend, three pets, and everything she owned, and what those 24 seconds revealed.
For veterinary professionals, this isn’t just a personal story. It’s a wake-up call. From how quickly fires actually spread to the gaps in what we think we know about safety, Beckie walks through what mattered, what didn’t, and what she wishes every clinic and pet owner understood.
You’ll hear practical takeaways you can apply immediately, including why attic heat sensors matter, how pets respond to alarms, and why most fire plans fall apart in real life. There’s also an honest look at decision-making under pressure and the limits of what’s possible when seconds count.
This episode will change how you think about preparedness, both at home and in practice.
Donate here:
GoFundMe #1: https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-beckie-after-house-fire
GoFundMe #2: https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-beckie-timmy-rebuild-after-house-fire
Is Veterinary Medicine More Neurodivergent Than We Think?
Neurodiversity is part of veterinary medicine, whether we talk about it or not.
In this episode, Dr. Ernie Ward and Beckie Mossor, MPA, RVT, sit down with Ron Sosa, veterinary team coach and founder of Syn-APT Leadership Coaching, to explore what neurodiversity really looks like in our profession. From Ron’s late diagnoses of ADHD and autism to high masking, imposter syndrome, and burnout, this conversation goes deeper than labels.
Ron shares why veterinary medicine may have a higher prevalence of neurodivergent professionals than the general population and what that means for clinic culture, leadership, and team dynamics. The discussion moves beyond accommodations and into accessibility, including practical ways to reduce cognitive load in the hospital environment.
If you lead a team, manage a practice, or simply want to better understand yourself and your coworkers, this episode offers thoughtful, actionable insight. It’s not about diagnosing anyone. It’s about building workplaces where people can thrive without having to mask who they are.
Online Complaints and Zero Tolerance: Have We Swung Too Far?
Bad online reviews aren’t new in veterinary medicine. What’s changing is how quickly we respond, and how quickly we sometimes end the relationship by “firing” the client who posted something critical.
In the 482nd episode of The Veterinary Viewfinder, Dr. Ernie Ward and Beckie Mossor, MPA, RVT, explore the real question behind legitimate negative reviews: when does a complaint justify firing a client, and when is it an opportunity to improve?
They unpack the difference between unsafe behavior and simple dissatisfaction, the emotional toll of public criticism, and how burnout may be shrinking our tolerance. The conversation also digs into power dynamics in medical professions, the shift from negotiation to zero tolerance, and what we lose when we default to dismissal instead of dialogue.
This episode offers practical reflection points for veterinarians, technicians, and practice leaders who want clear boundaries without sacrificing professionalism or growth.
If your clinic has wrestled with online complaints, or if your team feels emotionally drained by them, this is a thoughtful, grounded conversation worth having.
We Closed the Clinic and Took the Entire Team to VMX: Here’s What Happened
Continuing education is required for veterinary professionals’ licensure, but finding time for CE often feels impossible. In this episode of The Veterinary Viewfinder, Dr. Ernie Ward and Beckie Mossor, MPA, RVT, speak with Dr. Andrea Freeman about a bold decision: closing her small animal practice and taking her entire team to VMX for continuing education.
Instead of sending one or two team members at a time, Dr. Freeman invited everyone. Doctors, technicians, CSRs, and part-time staff all attended. The result was more than CE credits. It strengthened communication, boosted morale, improved retention, and energized the entire practice.
Even more surprising? Dr. Freeman says her clients were supportive. With clear communication and advanced planning, she states her clinic did not lose business or trust.
If you have ever wondered whether shutting down for CE is realistic, this episode offers a practical, real-world example of how it can work and why it might be worth it.
Ask the Dog First: Why Most Dog Bites Are Preventable
Dog bites are more common than most people realize, and nearly all of them are preventable. This week on The Veterinary Viewfinder, Dr. Ernie Ward and Beckie Mossor, MPA, RVT, welcome back longtime friend and Certified Animal Behavior Consultant, Steve Dale, to talk about his new children’s book, Ask the Dog, and why it may be one of the most important dog bite prevention tools veterinarians can share.
Each year, an estimated 4.5 million people in the U.S. are bitten by dogs, with hundreds of thousands requiring medical care. Steve explains why focusing only on asking the owner misses the most critical step: asking the dog. From subtle body language to displacement behaviors we routinely ignore, dogs often tell us when they are uncomfortable long before a bite happens.
The conversation explores why hugging dogs, reaching hands toward faces, and forcing interactions can increase risk, even with familiar pets. The group also discusses the powerful role veterinary technicians and veterinarians play in translating dog behavior for clients, and how early education can reshape the next generation’s relationship with dogs.
This episode is a must-listen for veterinary teams, pet parents, and anyone who believes preventing dog bites starts with listening better.
Ranked, Rejected, or Hired: How AI Is Quietly Reshaping Careers
Artificial intelligence is no longer a future concept in veterinary hiring. It is already here, quietly screening resumes, ranking candidates, and influencing who gets interviewed, hired, or never hears back at all. In this episode of The Veterinary Viewfinder, Dr. Ernie Ward and Becky Mosser, MPA, RVT, unpack how AI-driven hiring tools are changing the employment landscape across all industries, and it’s starting in veterinary medicine.
From automated resume screeners to algorithm-based candidate rankings, these systems promise efficiency but raise serious concerns about transparency, bias, data privacy, and the loss of human judgment.
The conversation explores how experienced veterinarians, technicians, and new graduates may be filtered out simply for not speaking the right “keyword language,” and why this creates emotional, professional, and legal risks for practices.
The episode also examines emerging lawsuits challenging AI hiring practices, the ethical implications of data scraping and social media monitoring, and the growing pressure on clinics to adopt these tools without fully understanding how they work.
For veterinary professionals navigating hiring, leadership, or career transitions, this discussion offers critical insight into what AI can and cannot do, and why maintaining human oversight may be more important than ever.
Western Veterinary Conference 2026 - The Bridge Club Bright Minds Award
Recognition: The Veterinary Viewfinder is honored as a 2026 Bridge Club Bright Minds as the Inaugural Industry Influencer Award recipient.
Join us: February 15, 2026, 10–11 AM, Level 2, Inside Pawp Up at the Western Veterinary Conference, for the award reception and panel discussion.