The first year in practice should not decide whether someone stays in veterinary medicine. But too often, it does.
In this episode, I’m joined by Dr Hope Darnell, a recent graduate who shares a clear-eyed account of what her first year in practice was really like.
Hope stepped into her first role with the things good graduates bring - commitment, curiosity, and a genuine desire to do the job well. On paper, the support was there. Experienced vets. A capable team. Reassurance that help was available.
Then reality hit.
Within weeks, Hope was carrying a heavy clinical load, managing complex cases and new clients back to back, and covering the practice alone far earlier than she should have been. Emergencies, surgery, on-call work, and quietly absorbing management tasks as gaps appeared. All on top of a full caseload.
Without bad intent, guiding turned into grinding.
This story is not unusual. Practices are stretched. Mentorship is inconsistent. Time is scarce. Many teams want to do the right thing, but lack the structure or capacity to truly support early-career vets.
What matters is this. Despite everything, Hope chose to stay.
She stayed because she still believes in the work, the profession, and the possibility that we can do better. That belief places responsibility on those of us in leadership to build environments where graduates can grow safely, not burn out quietly.
If we get this right, we don’t just protect graduates – we strengthen our practices and safeguard the future of veterinary medicine.
This is Part 1 of a two-part conversation and forms the foundation of a session I’ll be delivering at VMX 2026, Guiding, Not Grinding. In Part 2, we move into practical solutions for supporting graduates, and the future of veterinary medicine, more effectively.
Episode Outline:
[00:02] – Meet Dr. Hope
[05:00] – Picking a first job
[09:00] – Support that looked solid
[12:00] – Trying to practise good medicine
[14:00] – Taking on more and more
[18:30] – Being left on your own
[20:00] – The day it all collided
[24:00] – Still working, but not coping
[26:00] – When numbness sets in
[31:00] – What new grads really need
[35:00] – The “unicorn vet” problem
[39:00] – Is your practice ready for a graduate?
[43:00] – Why mentorship matters
[45:00] – Why Dr Hope stayed in vet medicine
Follow Dr Dave Nicol:
Instagram: @drdavenicol
Learn more about leadership support and training: Veterinary Leadership Academy
Connect with Dr Hope Darnelle:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hope-darnell-dvm-b53054214/
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