Lawrence Garcia

Clinical Associate Professor University of Florida

  • Gainesville FL

Larry Garcia specializes in veterinary disaster preparedness and response, animal technical rescue/training and shelter medicine operations.

Contact

University of Florida

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Biography

Larry Garcia, M.S., D.V.M., serves as medical director of the Veterinary Emergency Treatment Service (VETS) team. With a diverse background in general practice, shelter medicine and emergency response; Garcia boasts a wealth of experience and leadership in veterinary disaster preparedness and animal sheltering. As leader of the UF VETS team, Garcia is responsible for developing medical protocols, overseeing medical equipment and pharmaceutical inventory and providing leadership and training to team members. His role ensures the VETS Team remains ready to respond to disasters affecting animal populations throughout Florida and beyond as a member of the Florida State Agricultural Response Team and in collaboration with the FVMA & FDACS.

Areas of Expertise

Emergency Management
Animal Technical Rescue Training
Disaster Preparedness
Shelter Medicine and Surgery
Veterinary Emergency and Disaster Response
Animal Technical Rescue
Animal Sheltering

Media Appearances

When animals are injured during storms, this team is there to help

UF News  online

2022-05-26

The UF Veterinary Emergency Treatment Service (VETS) disaster response team, made up of veterinarians, emergency responders and students from the UF College of Veterinary Medicine, mobilized quickly to help animals with emergency care using triage, gas anesthesia and basic surgery during storms.

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Spotlight

2 min

Florida needs veterinarians trained to respond to natural disasters. Congress can help.

When Hurricane Helene struck, we were on the frontlines in Florida’s Big Bend region, racing against time to support the Humane Society as they rescued animals displaced by the most powerful storm ever to hit this part of the state. Two weeks later, we were back in action, facing the devastating flooding from Hurricane Milton. These back-to-back disasters showcased the urgency and critical need for emergency-response veterinarians who can act fast to save lives. We lead one of the nation’s only three emergency veterinary response teams — the University of Florida Veterinary Emergency Treatment Service (UF VETS). Founded after the 2004 hurricane season and operating under the UF College of Veterinary Medicine, the UF VETS program hosts two distinct, yet complementary, branches: a medical response unit for disaster-affected animals and an animal technical rescue branch, which manages complex operations like overturned livestock trailers. Larry Garcia specializes in veterinary disaster preparedness and response, animal technical rescue/training and shelter medicine operations. View his profile here Our team is on call whenever disaster strikes, working alongside local and state veterinary organizations, animal rescues and law enforcement to save animals in crisis. But here’s the problem: Without a nationwide system for coordinating these efforts, it’s often chaotic, and animals suffer because of it. Now Congress has a golden opportunity to change that. As they return to Washington, they have the chance to make a game-changing impact by including funding in the final FY 2025 Homeland Security Appropriations bill to create a nationwide network of veterinary emergency teams. This funding could revolutionize how the U.S. handles animal care during national disasters — and it needs to happen, fast. Read more ... Looking to know more about this important topic or connect with Lawrence Garcia simply click on his icon now to arrange an interview today.

Lawrence Garcia