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Showing posts with label veterinary medicine news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label veterinary medicine news. Show all posts

Friday, May 20, 2016

October Dates Set for 2016 AVMA Economic Summit



(Excerpted from the AVMA@Work blog)
If you’re interested in the economic future of the veterinary profession—and in gathering information and tools to help you operate your business more successfully—set aside the dates October 24-25 to attend this year’s AVMA Economic Summit.
Our economics team convenes the summit every year to help practice owners and other business-focused veterinarians understand the veterinary economic markets and get tools to operate in business successfully. This year’s meeting will be held Oct. 24-25 outside Chicago, in Schaumburg, Illinois. Learn more.

Monday, May 16, 2016

Preventing Dog Bites: Educational Tools to Help Veterinarians

(Reposted from the AVMA@Work blog)
Did you know that nearly 4.5 million Americans are bitten by dogs each year, and that 20 percent of the victims require medical attention?
Veterinarians realize that while even the gentlest dog can bite, most bites can be prevented.  This is National Dog Bite Prevention Week®, and the AVMA has resources to help you educate your clients and make your community a safer place to live.
As the founding sponsor of National Dog Bite Prevention Week®, the AVMA is committed to reducing the number of dog bites and helping dog owners maintain the loving bonds they have with their dogs. The AVMA offers resources to help you teach clients about socializationresponsible dog ownershipwhy dogs bite, and recognizing risky situations, among other topics. A client-ready brochure on dog bite prevention is available in the AVMA's online store in both English and Spanish. And the AVMA YouTube channel has a complete playlist of fun, kid-friendly videos about dog bite prevention; play them on a loop in your clinic or embed the playlist on your website.
The AVMA also can help you celebrate National Dog Bite Prevention Week® on social media. Download any of three National Dog Bite Prevention Week® cover photos, and use them as your own to customize your profile. (Yes, it’s really OK!) For AVMA members, there are pre-written social media posts that you can copy and paste, plus ideas for writing your own if you prefer. Follow the AVMA’s social media accounts – especially FacebookLinkedIn and Twitter – where the AVMA will share dog bite prevention materials throughout the week.
While you educate clients locally about dog bite prevention, the AVMA represents veterinarians nationally as sponsor of the National Dog Bite Prevention Week® Coalition. AVMA Board of Directors member Dr. Lori Teller spoke at a news conference to kick off the week-long event, emphasizing the important role veterinarians can play in assessing, monitoring and improving dogs’ behavior.
“Pet owners should talk to their veterinarian regarding any behavioral concerns they may have,” said Dr. Teller, a veterinarian at the Meyerland Animal Clinic in Houston. “Their family veterinarian can assist in determining if there is a medical component; which medication, if any, would be most appropriate as part of an integrated treatment program; and whether or not a referral to a behavior specialist is warranted.”
For a more complete account of the news conference, read the press release.

Friday, April 22, 2016

Monday, April 11, 2016

New Iowa State University Research Seeks to Answer Lingering Questions on the Leading Cause of Lameness in Cattle

Paul Plummer
AMES, Iowa – Iowa State University veterinarians have uncovered new insight into the development of a foot disease in cows that causes more lameness than any other malady.

Bovine digital dermatitis, a disease that appears as painful lesions on the heel of a cow’s hoof, has caused difficulty for the U.S. dairy industry for decades and has become a growing concern for beef producers as well, said Paul Plummer, an assistant professor of veterinary diagnostic and production animal medicine.

Plummer leads a group of researchers at the ISU College of Veterinary Medicine studying the disease and potential treatments for its management. The researchers recently published an article in the peer-reviewed Journal of Dairy Science that takes a close look at the epidemiology of the disease, revealing new information on how the disease develops and how likely it is to recur after treatment.

“People have been researching this disease for 40 years,” Plummer said. “But we still don’t understand its exact causes.” Veterinarians often link bovine digital dermatitis to a form of pathogenic bacteria known as treponemes because the bacteria are usually present in the advanced lesions caused by the disease. But Plummer said the ISU research showed that treponemes don’t appear during the earlier development of the disease, suggesting that other bacteria may drive the disease process and later create a favorable environment for the treponemes to thrive.

“The treponemes might be the rowdy guys causing problems at the end of the party, but they’re not necessarily the ones who started the party,” Plummer said. Plummer and his team have studied 60 cows at the ISU Dairy Farm for three years. They took regular photos of the hooves of each animal to create a trail of data for each cow. When they found an animal with lesions caused by digital dermatitis, they went back through their photos and data to look for patterns in the early development of the disease.

The study also allowed them to catalog cases of recurrence after treatment and how often the disease resulted in lameness, or immobility. The research showed that a majority of cows that contracted the disease weren’t lame, a finding that has implications for how dairy and beef producers should track the disease.

“So if you’re only looking at specific occurrences of lameness in a herd, you may be missing a lot of cases,” he said. “Just looking at lameness doesn’t give a full picture of the disease.”

Last year, Plummer and his team received a three-year, $500,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Institute of Food and Agriculture to assess best practices for treatment and management of digital dermatitis on farms and to study the disease on beef feedlots, where it’s becoming more common.

Bovine digital dermatitis has largely affected the dairy industry, and dairy producers have managed the disease through the use of walk-through footbaths installed between milking parlors and barns that cows travel through before and after they’re milked. But in recent years, the disease has increasingly shown up in beef feedlots, where footbaths are less practical.

Plummer said it’s unclear why beef cattle feedlots have recently developed more problems with digital dermatitis. Environmental contamination issues likely play a role, because feedlots tend to have persistent problems with the disease once infected, he said.

“Dairy farmers have learned to manage the disease and minimize lameness,” Plummer said. “But feedlots aren’t equipped in the same way to do that. Controlling the disease is a lot more difficult on the feedlots.”

Plummer’s collaborators at Iowa State include Adam Krull, Jan Shearer, Patrick J. Gorden and John Coatney, all from the ISU Department of Veterinary Diagnostic and Production Animal Medicine.

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Pet Ownership Appears to Have Health Benefits

The American Heart Association and other medical experts say that there are many health benefits that come with pet ownership, according to a recent story in the Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch.

Researchers at Oregon State University are finding that older dog owners have significantly lower levels of systolic blood pressure than people who don't own dogs.  Read the full story.

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Canine Influenza Resources From the AVMA

Canine influenza is making headlines across the nation  (Click here for a recent NPR story).

The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) website provides useful resources on canine influenza, including (for AVMA members) downloadable handouts for clients. Click here to view the AVMA's canine influenza resources page.

Friday, January 15, 2016

USDA Confirms Highly Pathogenic H7N8 Avian Influenza in a Commercial Turkey Flock in Dubois County, Indiana

WASHINGTON, January 15, 2016 -- The United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has confirmed the presence of highly pathogenic H7N8 avian influenza (HPAI) in a commercial turkey flock in Dubois County, Indiana.  This is a different strain of HPAI than the strains that caused the 2015 outbreak.  There are no known cases of H7N8 infections in humans.  As a reminder, the proper handling and cooking of poultry and eggs to an internal temperature of 165 ˚F kills bacteria and viruses, including HPAI.

Read the full USDA release

RELATED

Interview with Nebraska State Veterinarian Dennis Hughes on HPAI

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Kansas State Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory Launches New Mobile Device App so Clients Can Track Progress on Diagnostic Samples for Animal Patients

Veterinarians Brady Luke and Charles Luke access diagnostic results in the field on a cellphone using a new app developed by the Kansas State Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory.
MANHATTAN, Kansas — Diagnostic results are now within touch at the Kansas State Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory — thanks to the launch of a brand-new app for mobile devices. The lab anticipates the new app will improve customer service and efficiency at delivering results to veterinarians across the country.

Gary Anderson, director of the Kansas State Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory in the College of Veterinary Medicine at Kansas State University, said the new app is a significant step forward in helping to deliver results.

"This is a major advancement in being able to provide diagnostics to practicing veterinarians out in the field," Anderson said. "Traditionally, we have used a variety of methods of delivery, from snail mail, telephone, fax and email. This app will give veterinarians a way to track the results as soon as they are received here in the lab. It will save time for everyone involved and is a real win-win for veterinarians and their clients who are seeking the best in medical care for their animals."


Gregg Hanzlicek, director of production animal field investigations for the Kansas State Diagnostic Laboratory, said that the app was specifically designed to meet client needs.

"We meet with so many of our veterinarians at conferences and events, and they have really prompted the demand to get results quicker and more easily," Hanzlicek said. "We're very excited we were able to figure out a way to merge the technology in our lab with the type of programming needed to create this type of an app for mobile devices. We're breaking new ground because there wasn't really anything else like this for us to emulate. We're fortunate to have the right people in our college to develop the application and test it for reliability."


Justin Wiebers is the director of client connections in the College of Veterinary Medicine.


"We studied what our veterinarians needed and looked at how the best mobile apps in other areas delivered on those types of needs," Wiebers said. "Then our programmers here in the college went to work."


Wiebers said push notifications are sent to veterinarians when their samples arrive in the lab and when their test results are ready. The veterinarians can then view and share those results wherever they happen to be working.


"It's a very intricate system to get information from our diagnostic lab database to the individual clients who are using a variety of Android, iPhone, and iPad devices," he said. "We're very excited to help our veterinarians be more productive while breaking new ground in the field of mobile apps for K-State."


The app is available at the App Store and at Google Play; just search for "KSVDL Mobile." Clients can get more information about the app by contacting the Kansas State Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory at 
clientcare@vet.k-state.edu, 866-512-5650 or visit ksvdl.org.