[ACVM] Vet micro education
CHARLES J CZUPRYNSKI
charles.czuprynski at wisc.edu
Tue Dec 29 12:45:59 EST 2015
At Wisconsin we have bacteriology, mycology, parasitology and immunology faculty who teach the veterinary medical students in the first 2 years of our curriculum.
Chuck Czuprynski
-----Original Message-----
From: Acvm_diplomates [mailto:acvm_diplomates-bounces+czuprync=svm.vetmed.wisc.edu at lists.osu.edu] On Behalf Of White, David M - APHIS
Sent: Tuesday, December 29, 2015 11:01 AM
To: ACVM - The American College of Veterinary Microbiologists Listserv <acvm_diplomates at lists.osu.edu>
Subject: Re: [ACVM] Vet micro education
All -
I once heard (with no data to back it up) that CSU was unusual in that they had a dedicated veterinary parasitologist who taught at the vet school. I think that's probably not true, but I'd be interested to hear from our new parasitology members how distributed they are, and if they feel that the vet schools (in general) have specialized/dedicated parasitology faculty, and if the academic leadership uses them in teaching the vet students?
Thanks
Dave
-----Original Message-----
From: Acvm_diplomates [mailto:acvm_diplomates-bounces+david.m.white=aphis.usda.gov at lists.osu.edu] On Behalf Of Wilkes, Rebecca Penrose
Sent: Monday, December 28, 2015 5:45 PM
To: ACVM - The American College of Veterinary Microbiologists Listserv <acvm_diplomates at lists.osu.edu>
Subject: [ACVM] Vet micro education
Hi All,
Just thinking about a few things lately. We are always asking ourselves in the BOG meetings how we can make ourselves more relevant. I am concerned about what I am seeing in the vet schools. It seems we are seeing more education geared toward small animal specialties, even in general vet education, at the expense of some more basic vet micro training. Addition of more and more internal med specialties and residencies but no addition of vet micro residencies. Also, I have observed a shift in the focus of research at vet schools toward animal models for human diseases for NIH funding. So, I ask, where does this leave us? How are we going to replace ourselves with the current direction things are heading? How do we get US veterinarians interested in vet micro if we continue to reduce vet micro classes/lectures in U.S. Vet schools and don't offer Vet micro residency programs? If we don't continue to value research for veterinary diseases, who will? Is this the impression others a
re getting too? Other than WSU and CSU, are any schools supporting vet micro training? Maybe I am wrong about all this? Does anyone have an opinion?
Thanks,
Becky Wilkes
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