• Hey Guest,

    We wanted to share a quick update with the community.

    Our public expense ledger is now live, allowing anyone to see how donations are used to support the ongoing operation of the site.

    👉 View the ledger here

    Over the past year, increased regulatory pressure in multiple regions like UK OFCOM and Australia's eSafety has led to higher operational costs, including infrastructure, security, and the need to work with more specialized service providers to keep the site online and stable.

    If you value the community and would like to help support its continued operation, donations are greatly appreciated. If you wish to donate via Bank Transfer or other options, please open a ticket.

    Donate via cryptocurrency:

    Bitcoin (BTC):
    Ethereum (ETH):
    Monero (XMR):
sanctionedusage

sanctionedusage

sanctioned sausage
Sep 17, 2025
529
does being a vet make you suicidal, or are you just more likely to want to be a vet if you're the type of person who's already chronically suicidal?

people think the rate is so high because the job itself is suicide-inducing, watching animals suffer. isn't it more likely that suicidal people would be drawn to a sacrificial and altruistic profession, which happens to be veterinary sciences?

it isn't very profitable. it isn't easy. and it's not very fun. if you're already interested in and smart enough for biology and medicine, or passionate about healthcare, a research field or human healthcare, especially emergency/pediatrics, is far more profitable and equally fulfilling. people can join a field for all kinds of benefits, but to join the veterinary field, you really have to be uniquely dedicated to fulfilling a high-demand, low-reward service to species that are never going to be respected, valued, or cared for like humans are. coupled with the suicide rate implies more of a foolproof correlation that people who are depressed, suicidal, or vulnerable also tend to be animal lovers and especially empathetic, not that the job itself is particularly traumatic compared to human healthcare, social work, certain investigator careers, etc...

to be even blunter, people who actually commit suicide might be more likely to have high empathy and altruistic traits. i'm sure suicidality is high in other professions, but the actual successful death rate is what's so alarming about vets.
 
OnMyLast Legs

OnMyLast Legs

Too many regrets
Oct 29, 2024
1,347
It's access to N.
 
  • Like
Reactions: pelicanportal, pthnrdnojvsc, Hollowman and 1 other person
I

idontknowwhatiam

Specialist
Sep 10, 2025
312
does being a vet make you suicidal, or are you just more likely to want to be a vet if you're the type of person who's already chronically suicidal?

people think the rate is so high because the job itself is suicide-inducing, watching animals suffer. isn't it more likely that suicidal people would be drawn to a sacrificial and altruistic profession, which happens to be veterinary sciences?

it isn't very profitable. it isn't easy. and it's not very fun. if you're already interested in and smart enough for biology and medicine, or passionate about healthcare, a research field or human healthcare, especially emergency/pediatrics, is far more profitable and equally fulfilling. people can join a field for all kinds of benefits, but to join the veterinary field, you really have to be uniquely dedicated to fulfilling a high-demand, low-reward service to species that are never going to be respected, valued, or cared for like humans are. coupled with the suicide rate implies more of a foolproof correlation that people who are depressed, suicidal, or vulnerable also tend to be animal lovers and especially empathetic, not that the job itself is particularly traumatic compared to human healthcare, social work, certain investigator careers, etc...

to be even blunter, people who actually commit suicide might be more likely to have high empathy and altruistic traits. i'm sure suicidality is high in other professions, but the actual successful death rate is what's so alarming about vets.
I'm actually read that dentists have a very high suicide rate. And divorce rate LOL. Always hooking up with those hygienists and assistants.
 
sanctionedusage

sanctionedusage

sanctioned sausage
Sep 17, 2025
529
I'm actually read that dentists have a very high suicide rate. And divorce rate LOL. Always hooking up with those hygienists and assistants.
lol i didnt know that

the professions' rates might just be sensationalist characterization honestly. you'd think cops would be notorious for gunshot suicides, but they're really not ,compared to the reputation vets have with suicide, though generally cops are 54% or so more likely to commit using any method compared to the general population. going by a few sparse studies, the rates of people committing via officer encounter (up to 36%) are around, equal to, or possibly even double the number of cops actually killing themselves (100-200 per year) depending on the yearly numbers you use (1300 people were killed by police in 2024; a big uptick which might've been a result of unjust police brutality and other social issues' effects, OR suicidal people seeing the traction from these movements in the media and sensing an opportunity. following the 36% number, that'd be 470 SBCs compared to 100-200 cop suicides. Other studies report more like 11%, which would be 143 following the 1300 number, matching cops' yearly suicide numbers).
 
darksouls

darksouls

Visionary
May 10, 2025
2,691
the dream job of veterinarian often turns into a nightmare,
many veterinarians end up in slaughterhouses
 
B

BradGuy123

Experienced
Jul 6, 2025
201
I have heard vets have a high rate of suicide. I wanted to be a vet when I was a kid because I loved animals so much. I went into a completely different field.

I asked AI about this and it said:
"Veterinarians face a significantly higher risk of suicide than the general population, with studies showing female vets are up to 3.5 times and male vets 2.1 times more likely to die by suicide. Key contributing factors include intense work-related stress, compassion fatigue, financial strain, and access to lethal, controlled substances like pentobarbital"