Study: Veterinary Students Have High Depression RatesJuly 28, 2011 Veterinary students are more likely to struggle with depression than human medicine students, undergraduate students and the general population, according to several recent studies from Kansas State University researchers. Mac Hafen, therapist and clinical instructor in K-State's College of Veterinary Medicine, and researchers from K-State, the University of Nebraska and East Carolina University, examined depression and anxiety among veterinary medical students. “We are hoping to predict what contributes to depression levels so that we can intervene and make things run a little bit more smoothly for students themselves,” Hafen said. Once a semester for the past five years, the researchers surveyed veterinary students in various stages of academic study. The survey helped uncover a rate of depression occurrence and understand how it related to the amount of stress veterinary students experience during their four years of study. During the first year of veterinary school, 32 percent of the veterinary medicine students surveyed showed symptoms of depression compared to 23 percent of human medicine students who showed symptoms above the clinical cutoff, as evidenced by other studies. The researchers discovered that veterinary students experience higher depression rates as early as the first semester of their …
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FDA Approves First Drug To Treat Urinary Incontinence In Female DogsJuly 27, 2011 The Food and Drug Administration today announced the approval of Incurin (estriol), the first drug approved for urinary incontinence in dogs. Incurin is indicated for the control of estrogen-responsive urinary incontinence in spayed female dogs. Hormone-based urinary incontinence is a common problem in middle-aged and elderly spayed female dogs. The pet can urinate normally, but leaks urine while resting. Physical examination and blood and urine tests are usually normal in these pets. Hormone-responsive incontinence can occur months to years after a dog is spayed. Incurin is manufactured by Merck Animal Health of Summit, N.J. The product was submitted for approval when Merck was known as Intervet Inc. Incurin is a natural estrogen hormone that increases the resting muscle tone of the urethra. The drug can also be used to treat female dogs with urinary incontinence due to estrogen depletion. In a study of 226 spayed female dogs, a greater percentage of dogs treated with Incurin improved compared to dogs treated with placebo. Incurin was shown to be effective for the control of estrogen-responsive urinary incontinence in spayed female dogs 1 year and older. Loss of appetite, vomiting, excessive water drinking and swollen vulva are some …
Hendra Virus Found In Australian DogJuly 27, 2011 The Australian Animal Health Laboratory reported the first positive test in a dog for Hendra virus from natural exposure. The dog had no reported illness but likely contracted the infection from one of three horses on the same property that died from Hendra between June and July. Several Queensland and New South Wales properties are under quarantine due to the equine Hendra virus infection. Hendra is in the Paramyxoviridae family, which was first isolated in 1994 during an outbreak of respiratory and neurologic disease in horses and humans in Hendra, Australia. Human and equine infections are spillover events from the natural hosts for the virus, flying foxes. All dogs are tested when exposure to infected horses is suspected. National policy is that Hendra-infected domestic animals are euthanized because of public health risk. The route of infection between bats and horses is believed to be via bat bodily fluids, including saliva, urine and birthing fluids contaminating horse feed or water. The virus rarely spreads between horses. There is no evidence of the virus being transmitted directly from flying foxes, also known as fruit bats, to humans. Quarantine and disinfection is the only preventive measures, as no …
U.C. Davis’ Stephen Barthold Receives AAVMC Excellence In Research AwardJuly 26, 2011 Stephen W. Barthold, DVM, Ph.D., of the University of California Davis school of veterinary medicine will receive the Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges’ (AAVMC) 2011 Merial-AAVMC Excellence in Research Award, it was recently announced. Dr. Barthold will receive the award on Aug. 6 at the Merial-NIH National Veterinary Scholars Symposium in Florida. The AAVMC board of directors established the award in 2010 to recognize outstanding research and scholarly achievements in the field of veterinary medicine. It recognizes an individual who has demonstrated excellence in original research, leadership in the scientific community and mentoring of trainees and colleagues in any discipline of veterinary medicine. “It's very fitting that Dr. Barthold has been selected to receive this inaugural Merial-AAVMC Excellence in Research Award,” said Dr. Marguerite Pappaioanou, the AAVMC's executive director. “His scholarly achievements in veterinary and comparative medicine are extraordinary and he is highly respected as a visionary leader, inspiring mentor, and role model whose work has done much to advance biomedical research and demonstrate the important contributions veterinarian scientists make to advancing human and animal health.” Dr. Barthold researches the interaction between infectious disease agents and their hosts. While on the faculty of Yale …
Fitzpatrick Launched Learning Platform For Veterinary ProfessionalsJuly 26, 2011 The Fitzpatrick Learning Academy, an online learning facility, has created new learning, training and continued professional development (CPD) opportunities for veterinarians and staff. During the British Veterinary Nursing Association’s (BVNA) National Veterinary Nursing week, the academy announced CPD options that help nurses develop social networks and aquire skills to deliver superior patient care. “We know that within the veterinary nursing profession one of the issues is that nurses feel they don’t get the credit they deserve.” Fitzpatrick said. “We wanted to help change that and to empower veterinary nurses by creating a dedicated worldwide veterinary nursing community where nurses can come together, share in the pursuit of knowledge, support each other through the development of social networks and access the most innovative and exciting CPD available.” The program is built around a series of eLearning modules, which qualifies students for three hours of CPD. Topics for the first year in include anaesthetic emergencies, radiography, wound management, physiotherapy, nosicomial infections and pain management. Each module is followed by a Vetinar, a one-hour webinar that consolidates learning outcomes and provides learners with the opportunity to interact. Nurses can share knowledge and experiences, post and answer questions and …
Abaxis Animal Health Names New Clinical Services ManagerJuly 25, 2011Abaxis Inc. Animal Health has named Keith DeJong, DVM, Dipl. ACVP as manager of clinical services. Dr. DeJong joined Abaxis in September of 2009 as a professional services representative after completing his residency in clinical pathology at the University of California – Davis school of veterinary medicine. He then became a diplomat in the college of veterinary pathology in December of 2010. Prior to his residency DeJong worked in a private practice in the New York City area. DeJong will be a resource for customers needing assistance with patient results and interpretation, while managignthe Abaxis consulting group of specialists for Abaxis Veterinary Reference Laboratories, as well as developing continuing educational materials for customers, Abaxis states. <Home>
Schurig Assumes AAVMC PresidencyJuly 25, 2011 Gerhardt Schurig, DVM, MS, PhD, dean of the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine (VMRCVM ), took his position as the new president of the Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges’ (AAVMC) at the 2011 AAVMC summer meeting. Dr. Schurig is a professor and veterinary immunologist in VMRCVM’s department of biomedical sciences and pathobiology. He spent two years working in the department of veterinary science at the University of Wisconsin-Madison then joined the faculty of Virginia Tech. Schurig previously served as chair of the department of veterinary biosciences, associate dean for research and graduate studies, director of Virginia Tech’s Institute for Biomedical and Public Health Sciences and as a senior researcher and former director of the Center for Molecular Medicine and Infectious Diseases. Read a Q&A with Dr. Schurig in VeterinaryPracticeNews.com. “Society holds practitioners of veterinary medicine in high esteem and those of us in academic veterinary medicine face the challenge of balancing the need for efficient and forward looking change with the need to maintain the best practices that make it such a great profession,” Schurig said. “Veterinary medical education instills a uniquely valuable, comparative approach to medicine and we need to …
Veterinary Referral Center Of ColoradoJuly 22, 2011 Veterinary Referral Center of Colorado has retained Fetching Communications as its agency of record, according to the Tampa, Fla.-based PR firm. Fetching is redesigning the center’s website, as well as managing its social media and media relations outreach and developing newsletters and marketing material. Fetching also recently signed dog chew company PetMatrix and dog toy company PhysiPet.
More Frontline Plus Generics To Exit Market Due To Patent IssuesJuly 21, 2011 In a move that will apparently remove most Frontline Plus generics (fipronil-methoprene combinations) from the market, Sergeant’s Pet Care Products Inc. of Omaha, Neb., plans to voluntarily remove its various products, citing patent infringement. Sergeant’s is initiating a return and exchange of all fipronil-methoprene products sold in a broad range of channels, including those sold as FiproGuard Plus (pet specialty retail), Pronyl OTC Plus (mass market retail), EctoAdvance (veterinary channel via Meridian Animal Health), Spectra Sure (direct to consumer via Durvet) and Prefurred (professional pest control market) because they infringe Merial's U.S. patent 6,096,329. Sergeant’s has not yet disclosed specifics of the return and exchange program or its future plans for marketing flea and tick control products combined insecticides with insect growth regulators (IGR). Fipronil-based generics not containing methoprene will remain on the market. The inclusion of the IGR is designed to help prevent reinfestation of the pet by killing pests at the egg and larva stage, not just the adult fleas and ticks that Fipronil kills. The action follows a continuing legal battle between Merial and Cipla and Velcera regarding patent claims surrounding their fipronil and methoprene flea-and-tick control products. In June, a U.S. …
AVMA Acquires NCVEI AssetsJuly 21, 2011 The American Veterinary Medical Association announced that the non-profit National Commission on Veterinary Economic Issues (NCVEI) will become part of AVMA by Sept. 30. The AVMA executive board OK’d purchasing NCVEI’s assets last month for $50,000, the annual contribution it had designated for the association. AVMA says NCVEI’s funding difficulties led to the purchase decision. The NCVEI website, database and branding will be controlled by AVMA. In 2000, AVMA, the American Animal Hospital Association and the Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges formed NCVEI to improve the economic future of the veterinary profession. In 2011, NCVEI received $50,000 in funding from AVMA and $5,000 from AAVMC. But AAHA cut ties with NCVEI at the end of 2010, saying NCVEI’s business model and administrative costs were a concern. AAVMC decided to fund the North American Veterinary Medical Education Consortium instead of NCVEI for 2012. A strategic plan is in development for NCVEI with announcement plans later this year. <Home>