How do you find a board-certified veterinary nutritionist in the US or UK?

Quick answer

Look for a veterinary nutritionist certified by a specialty college: in the US a Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Nutrition (DACVN), in Europe and the UK a Diplomate of the European College of Veterinary and Comparative Nutrition (DipECVCN), recognised by the EBVS. A regular vet can refer owners to these rare specialists (ACVN; ECVCN, EBVS).

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General documentary information. For an individual animal, a veterinarian's advice takes precedence over any online content.

Detail

Identifying a recognised specialist

The reference in the US is the DACVN, awarded by the American College of Veterinary Nutrition, folded into the ACVIM since 2021; in Europe and the UK it is the DipECVCN, from the European College of Veterinary and Comparative Nutrition, founded in 1998 and recognised by the EBVS (ACVN; ECVCN, EBVS). These specialists complete supervised training, pass a demanding examination and are re-evaluated every five years. The scale that explains the wait for an appointment: there are roughly 100 DACVN diplomates in the US and around 50 ECVCN diplomates across Europe, a handful for millions of animals, sometimes reachable remotely through the treating vet.

How to access a consultation

In both the US and the UK, the route usually runs through the regular vet, who can refer to a specialist or to a veterinary school with a nutrition service (WSAVA, 2021). Veterinary teaching hospitals and university clinics are sensible entry points. For a healthy animal, such a consultation is not needed; it earns its value when a disease is present or a home-cooked ration has to be formulated.

At a glance
ProfileRecognitionWhen to consult
DACVN / DipECVCNACVN, ECVCN (EBVS)Complex cases, tailored ration
Vet school nutrition serviceUniversityReferral by the regular vet
Regular vetLicensing bodyFirst port of call
The Petipedia angle

Petipedia explains how to identify a board-certified veterinary nutritionist and reach one, without naming a practitioner or steering commercially.

Sources

ACVN / ACVIM, Nutrition specialty; ECVCN, College information; EBVS, European Board of Veterinary Specialisation; WSAVA, Global Nutrition Guidelines (2021).