Swine Medicine Education: A Survey of North American and Caribbean Veterinary Colleges Curricula

Today we are sharing a new publication in the Journal of Veterinary Medical Education by a team of swine educators across US veterinary colleges, including Drs. Maria Pieters and Perle Zhitnitskiy. The article is available in open access on the journal’s website.

Abstract

Numerous demands on the Doctor of Veterinary Medicine training program have the potential to reduce the amount of time allocated to food animal species in general including swine medicine, despite it being a key component of veterinary education. The objective of this study was to describe swine medicine training opportunities at North American and Caribbean veterinary education institutions. A 21-question survey was developed and distributed to veterinary colleges across North America and the Caribbean. The survey was available from October 2021 to March 2022, and one response was accepted per institution. Seventy-four percent of contacted institutions completed the survey, representing 29 veterinary colleges located in the United States of America, Canada, or the Caribbean. Responses were aggregated, analyzed, and grouped by topic: institution opportunities, curriculum opportunities, clinical opportunities, and faculty involvement in the swine medicine curricula. There was substantial variation among institutions in the delivery and resources allocated to swine medicine specific curricula. Swine veterinarians help ensure the health and well-being of animals and food safety. More research is required to evaluate the outcomes of the currently available opportunities. Concurrently, veterinary education institutions should prevent the attrition of swine educational program by investing in the support and development of swine opportunities for students.

Faculty full time equivalents for teaching, research, outreach/extension, and service in 2021 as reported by each institution

PRRS monitoring by processing fluids in Italian swine breeding farms

This is our Friday rubric: every week a new Science Page from the Bob Morrison’s Swine Health Monitoring Project. The previous editions of the science page are available on our website.

In this week’s Science Page, researchers Matteo Tonni, Claudia Romeo, Nicoletta Formenti, M. Beatrice Boniotti, Flavia Guarneri, Livio Colosio, Simone Andreoni, Federico Scali, Paolo Pasquali and G. Loris Alborali share their findings from monitoring Italian breeding herds.

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Reflections on the Leman Swine Conference by Dr. John Deen

Dr. John Deen holding an award presented to him at the 2023 Leman Swine Conference recognizing his work with the UMN Swine Group.

This year Dr. John Deen was recognized at the Leman Swine Conference for his work in the swine group at the University of Minnesota in the Department of  Veterinary Population Medicine. Dr. Deen hosted the wrap-up panel at the conference, and wrote this piece for the conference about his reflections on his 24 years of service.

Thank you, Dr. Deen for your contributions to the Swine Group!

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