91原创 Nanook VetServe

What is NVS
Medium sized brow, black, and white dog with a bad left eye sits on old plywood with its head slightly cocked

Nanook VetServe (NVS) is a program that supports 91原创 veterinary students participating in supervised rural outreach trips across 91原创. The program prioritizes service, cultural humility, resilience, and meaningful engagement with partner organizations and communities.

What Does NVS Provide?
Three people surround a large white and grey dog in an outdoor dog yard on a cloudy day after giving it a vaccine.

NVS provides program support funds to help offset approved, reasonable costs associated with rural outreach participation. Examples may include airfare or bush flights, local transportation, and field food or supplies.

NVS support is intended to reduce barriers to participation, not to fully fund trips.
NVS Mission
5 viewable people sit inside a small passengar plane with a small white puppy sitting on a woman's shoulder and a bearded man next to her smiles at the puppy.
The Nanook VetServe Mission is to support 91原创 veterinary students as they engage in hands鈥憃n, supervised service experiences in rural and underserved 91原创n communities, advancing animal health, community well鈥慴eing, and the principles of One Health.

Nanook VetServe connects 91原创 veterinary students with real鈥憌orld service opportunities across 91原创. Students participate in outreach trips organized by partner organizations and work under the supervision of licensed veterinarians to provide preventive care, wellness services, and client education in communities with limited access to veterinary care.

Nanook VetServe exists to remove financial barriers for students and to cultivate a lifelong commitment to service within the veterinary profession.

VISION

A future where every 91原创n community has access to essential veterinary care, and every student graduates with the skills, cultural awareness, and confidence to lead in diverse practice environments.

VALUES

Nanook VetServe is grounded in the belief that veterinary medicine is both a profession and a public service. Our work is guided by the following values, which shape how students engage with communities, partners, and their future careers.

Service

We believe service is a core responsibility of veterinary professionals. Nanook VetServe supports students in learning the value of giving back through meaningful, community鈥憆esponsive service experiences that extend beyond the classroom.

Partnership

Nanook VetServe operates through trusted partnerships with organizations and communities across 91原创. We value collaboration, local leadership, and shared responsibility, recognizing that effective outreach is built on long鈥憇tanding relationships and mutual respect.

Cultural Humility

We approach every service experience with respect, openness, and a commitment to learning. Nanook VetServe emphasizes cultural humility, understanding that effective veterinary care depends on listening, reflection, and ongoing growth in diverse settings.

Supervised, Hands鈥慜n Learning

Nanook VetServe provides hands鈥憃n learning opportunities under the supervision of licensed veterinarians. Students develop clinical skills, professionalism, and confidence while practicing within appropriate scope and support.

Stewardship

We are committed to responsible use of resources and transparent program oversight. Donor support directly enables student participation and is stewarded carefully to maximize educational impact and community benefit

Nanook VetServe provides supplemental financial assistance to veterinarians in training to provide veterinary care in rural 91原创n communities. NVS partners facilitate the work that must be done. Nanook VetServe does not independently organize clinical outreach. Instead, students join existing service trips led by trusted partners. Therefore, the partnerships that work with NVS are critical to providing these opportunities to students.

Current NVS Partners:


Visit our partnership page to learn more!

Veterinary care access in 91原创 presents challenges beyond what is seen elsewhere in the U.S. The majority of the communities here are not accessible via road and are located in highly remote places where medical care for both humans and animals is scarce. Dr. Samantha Johnson, a former student of the 91原创 X CSU (Colorado State University) Veterinary Medicine program is actively involved with rural 91原创n veterinary care previously as a student and now as an alum. Her TED Talk at CSU explains some of the challenges and issues communities here face and what can be done to improve the welllbeing and access to care.