Vet gives bullied fish a prosthetic eyeJune 28, 2016A fish named Kiwi wasn't doing well when he developed a cataract. His tank mates started bullying him. Kiwi was taken to Megan Baebler of Kersting Veterinary Hospital in Chesterfield, Mo. She removed the cataract, and then the eye.
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KSU launches vet photo competitionJune 28, 2016Kansas State University College of Veterinary Medicine is launching their “Veterinarians Around the World Photo Competition.”
Seal with broken jaw treated by UK vetJune 28, 2016A young seal is recovering at Hunstanton Sea Life Sanctuary in Norfolk, UK, after being found abandoned with a broken jaw. Named Bonnie, the seal's injury was so bad that the veterinarian who worked on her Chris Tansley said he had only seen such injuries on cats who had had a bad fall or been hit by a car,
NorthStar VETS earns level I VECCS certificationJune 27, 2016NorthStar VETS, a 24/7 emergency, trauma and specialty animal hospital located in Robbinsville, N.J., has been certified as a Level I Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Facility by the Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society (VECCS).
University of Florida to expand shelter operations by fallJune 24, 2016The University of Florida Veterinary Community Outreach Program has plans to broaden its spay-neuter training for students by fall 2016 with a new mobile unit that is currently under construction.
UK veterinary groups and schools react to BrexitJune 24, 2016With the UK voting to leave the European Union, how will it affect the veterinary community? President of the British Veterinary Association, Sean Wensley, had this to say in a statement...
Letters to the Editor: June 2016 IssueJune 23, 2016Open Dialogue is Best I was pleased to see the “Open letter to the veterinary community” signed by Dr. Ralph L. Brinster and 19 others [Viewpoint, May 2016]. While I don’t closely follow the veterinary educational issues addressed in the letter, I have experienced and have heard of others having letters rejected by JAVMA editor-in-chief Dr. Kurt Matushek for similarly stated reasons—“not add(ing) any new information or advanc(ing) any new argument.” It appears the current editor of the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association has taken a different direction than his predecessor, Dr. Janis Audin, who did an excellent job of moderating letters to JAVMA, even when she disagreed with the letter writer’s point of view. Now, it seems, if the JAVMA editor disagrees with the premise of a letter, it is summarily rejected. Such is not a healthy practice in representing the variety of views within our profession. I once responded to a letter written to JAVMA by a non-AVMA member who asserted that our profession was sexist. My response questioned the writer’s criteria by which we were judged to be sexist, noting among other things that the current gender ratio …
Reply to An 'Open Letter to the Veterinary Community About COE Standards'June 23, 2016The original letter here: Viewpoint: An Open Letter to the Veterinary Community About COE Standards Even the most casual reader of the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association knows that the journal has not shied away from publishing a wide diversity of views, including views that disagree with those of the AVMA. As editor-in-chief of the largest veterinary medical journal in the world—and one of the largest biomedical journals—I take quite seriously the journal’s mission “to promote the science and art of veterinary medicine and provide a forum for discussion and dissemination of ideas important to the profession.”AVMA. As editor-in-chief of the largest veterinary medical journal in the world—and one of the largest biomedical journals—I take quite seriously the journal’s mission “to promote the science and art of veterinary medicine and provide a forum for discussion and dissemination of ideas important to the profession.” The truth is that very, very few letters submitted to JAVMA are rejected. As editor-in-chief, I do, however, demand that letter writers maintain a certain level of professionalism and, as indicated in our instructions, will not publish letters containing defamatory, libelous or malicious statements or letters representing attacks on or …
UF's Ocala emergency clinic gains AAHA accreditationJune 23, 2016The University of Florida Pet Emergency Treatment Services (UF PETS) of Ocala, Fla., recently gained accreditation from the American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA).
Serena Williams could have been a veterinarianJune 21, 2016If Serena Williams hadn’t discovered tennis, she might have been a veterinarian. That’s according to a Wall Street Journal exclusive profile on the world-famous tennis player. They asked her where she would be right now if she hadn’t started playing tennis.