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WSAVA provides continuing education in Latin America

The World Small Animal Veterinary Association Vaccination Guidelines Group (VGG) held a series of meetings and continuing education sessions in Mexico as part of a first step in WSAVA's three-year project aimed at enhancing levels of understanding of infectious diseases among veterinarians across Latin America. WSAVA committee members, including Michael Day, VGG chairman, emeritus professor, met with veterinary association leaders, academics, first-opinion practitioners, and government regulators in Mexico City, Guadalajara, and Monterrey. They delivered three evening CE sessions and live-streamed the Mexico City session to share with registrants for 30 days after the presentation. Prior to the visit, the VGG conducted an online questionnaire to collect data on veterinary demographics, infectious disease occurrence, and vaccination protocols, and presented the results during the CE events. "Mexican veterinarians are accustomed to the principle of annual revaccination of dogs and cats with multicomponent products, but those we spoke to were excited by the new concepts of less frequent and individualized vaccination, incorporated into a preventive healthcare package for pets," said Day. "Vaccine-preventable infectious diseases such as canine distemper and parvovirus infections, remain highly prevalent in Mexico.  Increasing herd immunity by improving vaccination coverage is clearly an important goal for …

AAVMC begins 2018-19 Comparative Data Report project

The Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges (AAVMC) has begun its latest Comparative Data Report (CDR) project, the association's largest institutional research project designed to generate a comprehensive statistical portrait of academic veterinary medicine. Data collected regarding faculty, applicants, student enrollment, tuition, educational debt, and finances and shared via reports, infographics, and more helps the AAVMC tell the story of academic veterinary medicine. The CDR also supports the production of the public data set that helps those outside the veterinary profession better understand the modern operating environment for academic veterinary medicine. The data collection effort concludes early November; the final report will be delivered to participating institutions by Dec. 21. Changes and additions to this year's CDR: Survey of institutional scholarships a regular component Data collection improvement in budget, expenditure surveys Includes international colleges in survey of research funding sources; includes appropriate categories for research expenditures, awarded grants Questions identify residents pursuing graduate degrees within colleges Includes periodic surveys with more detailed race, ethnicity data on academic personnel For more information about the program, email Lisa Greenhill, MPA, EdD, senior director for institutional research and diversity, at lgreenhill@aavmc.org.