VETgirl spotlights the veterinary innovations shaping 2026
Version 1 — Brief
VETgirl is putting a spotlight on the technologies likely to shape veterinary medicine in 2026, with Drs. Garret Pachtinger and Justine Lee framing innovation around practical tools that fit into daily practice, not just future-facing concepts. The discussion lands as VETgirl rolls out its VETgirl vital app, which packages CE tracking, offline learning, certificates, curated content, and community features into one mobile platform, and after the company said it delivered more than 150,000 hours of CE in 2025 while planning expanded certificate programs, smarter learning formats, and bigger live events in 2026. More broadly, the conversation aligns with a profession-wide shift toward AI-enabled workflows, mobile-first education, and digital tools that support efficiency without replacing clinical judgment. (marketing.vetgirlontherun.com)
Why it matters: For veterinary professionals, the real story isn't novelty, it's implementation. As AI, digital education, and connected tools move further into mainstream veterinary workflows, regulators and professional groups are already signaling that human oversight, transparency, data privacy, recordkeeping, and informed consent still sit squarely with the licensed veterinarian. That means practices evaluating new platforms, whether for CE, documentation, triage support, or decision support, will need to balance convenience and team efficiency with governance, training, and compliance. (aavsb.org)
What to watch: Expect more veterinary CE providers, hospitals, and industry groups to move from talking about innovation in 2026 to setting clearer rules for how AI and other digital tools are actually used in practice. (aavsb.org)