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.
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.