|
Academia & Education
-
Veterinarians react to academia’s expansion into private sector
4/11/2013
Ohio State's new specialty practice pits school against alumni, critics say
-
Final destination for Ross veterinary students — Buffalo?
3/7/2013
Abandoned medical facility could become veterinary teaching hospital
-
Government orders veterinary-school accreditor to correct problems
12/14/2012
Veterinarians air criticisms before education panel
-
Satellite practices: academic evolution or unfair competition?
10/26/2012
OSU to open emergency, specialty practice in Columbus suburb
-
Welfare college receives provisional recognition
8/16/2012
Veterinarians eager to watch specialty group evolve
-
Delegates punt move to eliminate AVMA vice presidency
8/13/2012
Task force to assess relevance of leadership position
-
Can MDs and DVMs bridge the cultural divide?
7/24/2012
Physician champions concept of 'zoobiquity'
-
Veterinarians try to make sense of Cuddon case
4/5/2012
CSU seeks permanent restraining order against veterinary neurologist
-
‘Special Direct Consolidation Loan’ offer confuses borrowers
3/19/2012
Limited offer exemplifies complexity of school-debt repayment options
-
Economist's talk rouses debate among veterinarians in academia
3/16/2012
New models for veterinary education presented
-
Clinic to serve needy pet owners, veterinary students
2/22/2012
High school setting believed to be a first
-
Student debt relief option: Instant gain, distant pain
1/4/2012
Pros and cons of Income-Based Repayment
-
Purdue veterinary school becomes ‘college’
12/28/2011
Name change ratified by Board of Trustees
-
AUA closes veterinary medical program
12/12/2011
Students forced to seek education elsewhere
-
Bid to bring veterinary education to Alaska stirs debate
11/9/2011
Fears of oversaturation weigh on need for more veterinarians
-
AAVMC leadership change puts Osburn at helm
10/21/2011
Dr. Marguerite Pappaioanou resigns to pursue work in public health
-
Veterinarian campaigns for awareness of mammary gland cancer
9/30/2011
October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month
-
St. George’s veterinary school receives U.S. accreditation
9/23/2011
Roughly 90 percent of program's graduates draw from North America
-
Dr. Donald Patterson: veterinary genetics pioneer and more
9/8/2011
Award recognizes lifelong medical research contributions
-
Homeopathy group sues AAVSB over CE credits
8/16/2011
Controversy shines spotlight on inner workings of RACE
-
Colorado State to examine rubble in fire's wake
8/2/2011
Source of blaze that destroyed Equine Reproduction Laboratory unknown
-
New Jersey forgoes AVMA House of Delegates
7/8/2011
‘Dramatic gesture’ underscores doubt about House’s relevance
-
ISU settles lawsuit with veterinarians
6/29/2011
Specialty referral practice to pay ISU
-
AVMA terminates online CE venture
4/22/2011
AVMA Ed to close by Dec. 31
-
New Utah veterinary education program wins approval, funding
3/11/2011
Plan stirs concerns about a potential oversupply of practitioners
-
Ross’ veterinary medical school earns U.S. accreditation
3/9/2011
First Caribbean program to receive COE's approval
-
Renowned veterinarian Dr. Robert W. Kirk dies
1/20/2011
Veterinarian had worldwide impact on profession
-
Physicians and veterinarians to share perspectives
1/7/2011
“Zoobiquity” conference aims to bridge medical divide
-
Veterinary student debt continues to climb
1/4/2011
Despite years of concern, solutions remain elusive
-
Debt problem is everyone’s
1/4/2011
Most student loans financed by taxpayers
-
Proposed welfare specialty college bends to veterinarians' concerns
12/16/2010
AVMA welfare principles no longer a point of contention
-
AVMA seeks third-party audit of accreditation program
12/10/2010
Voluntary review meant to allay scrutiny, concerns raised by veterinarians
-
Utah Regents approve new veterinary school
12/9/2010
Final decision rests with Legislature
-
Utah Regents to vote on new veterinary medical program
12/8/2010
Plan requires millions of dollars in support from Legislature
-
Veterinary Medicine Loan Repayment Program gets off ground
11/9/2010
First USDA awards go to 62 recipients
-
Texas veterinarians mull reviving bid to examine AVMA’s role in global accreditation
8/19/2010
Those calling for audit face accusations of racism; issue clouded by politics, some contend
-
Proposed animal welfare college challenged by veterinarians
8/5/2010
Critics lambast mandate to sign AVMA welfare principles
-
What's happening with accreditation of foreign health professional schools?
7/13/2010
Veterinarians in heated debate; dentists pushed to test water; physicians eye from a distance
-
Veterinarians question AVMA's role in international accreditation
7/13/2010
Texas resolution calls for self-study
-
Veterinarians to AVMA: Talk to us
7/6/2010
In VIN survey, group rates low on communication, high on leadership
-
Renowned statistician to teach course for veterinarians
6/1/2010
Course outlines main statistical concepts used in veterinary research
-
St. George's shuns rumors of closing, seeks U.S. accreditation
5/14/2010
Federal student aid could soon be available to students
-
UNAM appeals failed bid for U.S. accreditation
4/22/2010
AVMA COE tight-lipped on findings that led to negative decision
-
CSU professor remains in critical condition following accident
4/2/2010
Support pours in from community
-
Prospect of accreditation for Mexican program fuels concern from U.S. veterinarians
3/12/2010
COE silent on recent UNAM verdict
-
Western U receives full accreditation
3/5/2010
COE grants three-year window
-
Accreditation under fire in veterinary medicine
2/26/2010
Concerns surface with the accreditation bids of two controversial programs
-
Osburn resigns from Banfield board of directors
2/13/2010
UC Davis dean cites potential conflict of interest as impetus for decision
-
Animal welfare initiative could divide Ohio veterinarians
2/11/2010
HSUS 'serious' about winning ballot measure to ban cramped housing for farm animals
-
Colleges grow with satellite clinics
10/21/2009
Ventures breed hostility from private sector in some cases
-
UI clinic opens shop in Chicago
9/22/2009
Supporters express high hopes for satellite clinic
-
H1N1 virus played no part in UC Davis worker's death
8/12/2009
Official cause of death pending
-
UC Davis death prompts warning of Type A H1N1 pandemic flu
8/10/2009
Administrative assistant complained of flu-like symptoms prior to death
-
AU veterinary student missing in Thailand
7/30/2009
-
Revision to AVMA’s policy on acquiring research animals gets ax
7/13/2009
'Pound seizure' illegal in 17 states
-
UC Davis opens stem-cell program for horses
6/23/2009
Stem-cell therapy: a highly active field
-
Father of veterinary cardiology remembered for unceasing labor, curiosity
3/3/2009
Dr. David K. Detweiler leaves legacy in veterinary medicine
-
Vet Schools: Desperate Times, Desperate Measures
1/30/2009
Colleges bruised by ailing economy
-
Fanconi-like cases continue in Australia
12/15/2008
Company recalls chicken treats made in China
-
Canine open-heart surgery coming to UC Davis
12/15/2008
History of veterinary cardiac surgery suggests formidable challenges ahead
-
Internships, residencies skyrocket in popularity, AVMA says
10/17/2008
40 percent of 2008's graduating class to seek advanced training, report shows
-
Researchers seek dogs for chronic renal disease study
10/1/2008
LSU investigates statin's power to slow disease
-
Lawsuit against Ross University heads for trial
9/30/2008
Student alleges harassment, deceit concerning terminal surgeries in curriculum
-
Mexican university seeks AVMA accreditation
9/22/2008
COE nod could usher Mexican veterinarians into the United States
-
International Animal Welfare Training Institute kicks off at UC-Davis
9/17/2008
Welfare group seeks partnerships with agriculture, research sectors
-
AAVMC spurns third-party rankings of veterinary colleges
9/12/2008
U.S. News and World Report scale breeds friction, leaders say
-
Nation’s 29th veterinary program...
9/10/2008
Second UC school headed for San Diego area
-
Veterinary medicine’s future incites debate
9/8/2008
Topics include limited licensure, tracking, accreditation
-
Purdue offers certificate in veterinary homeland security
9/8/2008
Graduate Certificate in Veterinary Homeland Security to create “critical mass” of experts
-
Inaugural class kicks off new Canadian veterinary program
9/5/2008
University of Calgary boasts 'innovative' program
-
CDC creates residency program for veterinarians
9/3/2008
Effort addresses 'national shortage' of DVMs working in biomedical research
-
UC-Davis to create Animal Welfare Institute
8/28/2008
Development meeting slated for Sept. 5
-
UT hires Thompson as dean
8/12/2008
Appointment effective Oct. 1, officials say
-
Cornell earmarks $25,000 gift for equine research
8/6/2008
Company with horse-racing ties issues funds to College of Veterinary Medicine
-
Wind power explored at Tufts veterinary school
7/8/2008
Study to determine feasibility of renewable energy source
-
OSU names interim dean following Rosol's resignation
7/2/2008
Dr. John Hubbell now heads OSU's veterinary program
-
LSU to host dermatology conference
|
|
Animal welfare initiative could divide Ohio veterinarians
|
February 11, 2010
By: Jennifer Fiala
For The VIN News Service
A war that waged between two factions of California’s veterinary profession in 2008 could repeat itself in the Buckeye State as the Ohio Veterinary Medical Association (OVMA) works to determine its stance on a proposed constitutional amendment designed to cement minimum housing requirements for pigs, veal calves and hens.
Veterinary insiders are calling the initiative Ballot X — a currently nameless proposition pushed by an activist consortium led by the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS). The immediate goal: to collect the 600,000-plus signatures needed to guarantee a spot for the “anti-cruelty measure” on the Nov. 2 ballot.
“If they don’t collect the signatures, this will all be a moot point,” says Jack Advent, OVMA executive director.
Yet Advent and others doubt that will be the case. If history is any guide, attracting supporters will be no problem for HSUS, a political powerhouse with an undefeated record in terms of pushing ballot measures across the country in the name of animal welfare.
Much like its cousin initiatives that have passed via citizen referendum in Florida, Arizona and California, Ballot X seeks to mandate that egg-laying hens, pregnant sows and veal calves live in quarters that allow them to extend their limbs and turn around, effectively banning traditional sow gestation stalls, veal crates and battery cages. It also requires that cows and pigs are slaughtered in manners deemed humane by the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA).
If enacted, the law would give the state’s newly minted Ohio Livestock Care Standards Board — an entity proposed last year by the Ohio Farm Bureau and other agribusiness groups — six years to set the new humane requirements in a state that ranks second in egg production and ninth in swine production. The proposed mandate also requires the board to adopt minimum standards for euthanasia and downer animals. Violators would face misdemeanor charges that carry a maximum $1,000 fine and/or a yearlong jail sentence.
At face value, the push for greater welfare requirements is hard to object to. But it's not so simple for the OVMA, whose leadership remains uncertain about where the association ultimately will stand on Ballot X. Among veterinarians, animal welfare is a polarizing and politicized topic. Even as practitioners spend their lives promoting the well-being of animals, it is non-DVM activists who appear to be guiding American attitudes on welfare. Some veterinarians are sympathetic to public sentiments; others find the position overly simplistic.
Considering the controversial nature of Ballot X, the OVMA is determined to take it slow. Within the next few months, officials plan to poll the group’s membership, hold a welfare forum in Columbus and start traveling the state to take the pulse of veterinarians.
“We need time to discuss this and have an open exchange with our members,” says Jack Advent, OVMA executive director. “Obviously no one wants to go to the ballot; it’s not going to be a pleasant experience for anyone. We’re going to look at animal housing, and there’s no rushing to judgment on this. These issues are too complex.”
What feeds the uncertainty? The answer boils down to politics, emotion and the push and pull between agriculture science and society’s ethics. For starters, there’s no consensus about whether veal crates, sow gestation stalls or battery cages are harmful or inhumane, even from the AVMA, which states that all housing systems carry pluses and minuses. As far as the nation’s largest veterinary membership body is concerned, science doesn’t point in any one direction when determining, for example, whether free-range housing is superior to battery cages. Case in point: While the public might suspect that tight quarters might be harmful to animals, free-range housing — a system favored by many activists — leaves livestock greatly exposed to communicable diseases, parasites and animal-on-animal aggression, the AVMA contends.
Yet for the public and even some in veterinary medicine, the notion that hens, pigs and veal calves want to get up and turn around seems like common sense, regardless of whether science can prove it. Critics claim that DVMs who support sow gestation stalls and battery cages in their current forms are less worried about animal welfare than they are that increased housing standards will be expensive for agriculture to implement. At the same time, a faction of veterinarians tied to agriculture contend that their small-animal colleagues are prone to jumping on the activist bandwagon, just as eager to impose costly and unnecessary reforms on those in agriculture who have fed America for more than two centuries.
Advent claims that’s not the case: “Most of my members really want to know and understand this. They don’t want to make a judgment that will affect their colleagues in large-animal practice.”
Dr. Fred Gingrich, a mixed-animal practitioner in rural Ohio with a number of dairy clients, believes that without first-hand knowledge, many of his DVM colleagues are too far removed from agriculture to make educated decisions about welfare as it relates to the day-to-day lives of farm animals. And the fact that the public might make that determination via a ballot initiative is “scary,” he contends.
“The real situation is that we’re very outnumbered (by activists) and now we’re outnumbered in the veterinary community,” Gingrich says. “In the United States there are more people in prison than there are that make food. The vast majority of veterinarians have never been on a farm. To us, this is about HSUS, this is not about animal agriculture. What it has to do with is them trying to weasel their way into agriculture to end it.
“We don’t need a vegan from San Francisco telling us how to raise our cattle,” he adds.
That vegan is Wayne Pacelle, HSUS president. In an interview with the VIN News Service, Pacelle refuted the notion that his dietary habits are an undercurrent in the animal welfare movement: “The majority of our policy directors are meat eaters; 90 percent of our members are meat eaters. All of our reforms are focused on humane production, transport and slaughter practices. We want proper care and treatment for animals raised for food.”
Asked how far HSUS is willing to dip into its campaign war chest to sway Ohio’s voters on Ballot X, Pacelle replies: “We never launch a ballot initiative unless we’re serious about winning. We have never failed on an initiative about farm animals. The polling indicates statewide support for reform.”
That kind of resolve was on display in California in 2008, where HSUS’ Proposition 2, a ballot initiative to phase in a ban on traditional battery cages for laying hens, produced so much upheaval that CVMA’s decision to support it caused a faction of its membership to spin off and form a new association. Veterinarians argued with each other about Prop 2 on the pages of newspapers while voters were inundated with campaign ads, the product of a collective $20-million battle waged between HSUS and the opposition, made up mostly of California livestock groups and agribusinesses.
Fallout from the CVMA’s support for Prop 2 came to a head when the AVMA made an unprecedented move by coming out in direct opposition of a state veterinary medical association.
Despite the AVMA’s message, Prop 2 passed with 63 percent of the vote. Reflecting on that time, CVMA Executive Director Valerie Fenstermaker says she wishes that a compromise between welfare activists and agriculture groups could have been reached so that the ballot initiative might have been avoided. After all, similar negotiations between activist, agriculture and veterinary groups resulted in increased welfare standards in Colorado, Oregon and, most recently, Michigan, where veterinarians helped craft and push for the passage of a welfare bill that imposed minimum housing requirements for some farm animals.
OVMA’s Advent hoped that would have been the case in Ohio. The opportunity to hammer out a deal with HSUS arose last February when Pacelle and Shapiro held a meeting with Ohio stakeholders in agriculture in an effort to work together and avoid what promises to be a costly and contentious battle.
But the Ohio Farm Bureau and other agriculture groups, mistrusting HSUS and its consortium, turned down the invitation to talk. Rather than negotiate with the activist group, they pushed for Issue 2, a ballot proposal that passed in November to create the Ohio Livestock Care Standards Board.
Many Issue 2 supporters had hoped that the board, designed to create standards for the care and treatment of livestock, would keep the HSUS threat of a ballot measure at bay. Yet Pacelle says it just inflamed the situation: “We wanted to sit down and hatch out a compromise that everyone could support, but the Ohio industry groups slammed the door on us and then ran to get Issue 2 approved. Our ballot measure will build on Issue 2 and give the board direction on what to do.”
Some in the veterinary profession agree that the 13-member Ohio Livestock Care Standards Board needs direction. Critics contend that it’s too heavily weighted toward producer and industry interests. While Keith Stimpert, the Ohio Farm Bureau’s vice president of public policy, did not return VIN News Service interview requests, DVM insiders claim that the board’s initial makeup included no veterinarians. Now it involves the state veterinarian and one private practitioner.
Gingrich reasons that there’s a lack of trust between producer groups and veterinarians: “People in agriculture are scared; they have no idea who they’re talking to. They’re trying to batten down the hatches.”
That's why it's imperative to keep animal welfare at the debate’s center and move away from the debate about HSUS, Advent contends.
“There’s a lot at stake,” he says. “We don’t want to have to deal with ballot issues, but we can’t ignore this; that’s avoiding our responsibility to the public and to the profession.
“Regardless of where we go, an element of our membership will be unhappy,” he adds.
Chances are that Gingrich might be an OVMA member who feels dejected.
“It concerns me that what happened in California is going to happen in Ohio,” he says. “I have no doubt that this will pass; HSUS has a pretty good track record. But I don’t want this to divide Ohio’s VMA.”
Sorry, but you do not have authorization to view the news article you requested.
|
|

Search VIN news
All news categories
Follow us
|