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The Veterinary Oath

The Veterinary Oath.

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The Veterinary Oath

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  1. The Veterinary Oath Being admitted to the profession of veterinary medicine, I solemnly swear to use my scientific knowledge and skills for the benefit of society through the protection of animal health, the relief of animal suffering, the conservation of livestock resources, the promotion of public health, and the advancement of medical knowledge.

  2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention The lead federal agency for protecting the health and safety of people. CDC's Mission: To promote health and quality of life by preventing and controlling disease, injury, and disability.

  3. Emerging Zoonoses "[In a study,] they found that humanity is currently plagued by 1709 known pathogens (from viruses and bacteria to fungi, protozoa, and worms). The team concluded that 832 of those, or 49%, are zoonotic. But among the 156 diseases that are considered "emerging," 114 were zoonoses - a stunning 73%.“ From the July 28, 2000 issue of Science

  4. Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) • Two year training program in public health at CDC • MD, DVM, PhD, RN/MPH, DDS and JD • Additional degree (MPH, MS) helpful • Practical experience in field epidemiology • outbreak investigations • disease surveillance • - research projects Dr. Stobierski “The disease detectives of CDC”

  5. EIS Background • Established in 1951 with 23 recruits • Mission: To prevent & control communicable diseases • Currently enrolls 65-75 new trainees annually • Approximately 60% of recent graduates are women • 20% - 35% represent ethnic minorities • Typical class composition: • 65-70% physicians (from many specialties) • 6-9% veterinarians • 3% dentists • 3% nurses • 17-20% PhDs

  6. Vets in EIS • 25 - 30 % who apply are accepted • Same percentage of physicians • Only 7% of applications are vets • 2000 – 2002: • 49 vet applicants/843 total applicants • 15 accepted

  7. What do EIS officers do on a daily basis?

  8. Oral Rabies Vaccination Program Fairfax, VA 2000 Serosurvey of raccoons following bait drop

  9. Oral Rabies Vaccination ProgramAbingdon, VA 2002bait drop

  10. Polio Eradication: Ghana, 1999 Vaccination clinic established in a rural island village

  11. Polio eradication, Bangladesh

  12. Polio eradication work in Nepal

  13. TB investigation of imported macaques

  14. Q fever and Brucellosis: July, 2000 Bosnia-Herzegovina Serosurvey of livestock from high-risk areas

  15. FMD Surveillance, UK May 2001 Serosurvey of sheep to lift quarantine in infected areas

  16. Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, Tennessee, June 2002 Dragging for ticks

  17. Lymphatic filariasis work in Haiti

  18. Gastrointestinal Illness on Cruise Ship, September, 2002

  19. Bioterrorism Surveillance following the World Trade Center Attacks, 9/11/01

  20. Anthrax Letters, Oct 2002 CDC Emergency Operations Center

  21. Summer Student Employment Program • http://www.cdc.gov/hrmo/intshps2.htm • Student Epidemiology Elective • Senior medical or veterinary students • Deadline for application is May 30 of applicant’s Junior year • 4-8 week internships, field investigations • Same contact information as EIS • EIS Application • Applications due in September/October each year • Interviews in November • New classes start in July, for a 2 year program • Contact: EIS Program Office • EPO-eis@cdc.gov • 1 (888) 496-8347

  22. For more information on CDC and EIS: www.cdc.gov www.cdc.gov/eis

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