Monday
May192014

EPDC Study Package Scholarship Winner

Bridgette Peal - OSU 

This is advice from an exhausted (finals are next week), anxious (clinics

start soon), successful (I think so) third year student to any first year who, no

doubt, thinks they know everything about becoming a successful

veterinarian (I thought the same), on what “professional development”

means to me.

Get to know your classmates; they are your future colleagues. Everyone has

a niche and one day you may need their expertise. Build those relationships

now.

Ask for help when you need it, and ask for feedback. Recognizing and

working on your weaknesses will not go unnoticed.

Study a little every day. To be a professional, you have to be knowledgeable,

and it is important to learn the material, not just memorize it for an exam.

Grades are not everything. Do not let your desire for a 4.0 keep you from

club activities or research. These are great networking opportunities and

ways to expand your knowledge base.

Get in the clinic. You will be able to practice thinking like a doctor and

correlate what you learned in class with real patients. Some days I felt like I

learned more in an afternoon in the clinic than in a week of lectures.

Improve your communication skills. Everyone can work on them, and it may

save you from a lawsuit one day.

Last, take time for yourself. No one can be on all the time. Sometimes you

need to watch bad reality television all afternoon. Professional development

is personal development after all.

 

Sunday
May182014

EPDC chooses four NAVLE Study Package Scholarship Winners! 

Over the next four days we will post the entries from the four winners of the EPDC NAVLE Study Package contest. Each won a subscription to the online study aid of their choosing. Congratulations!!

Bridgette Peal - OSU

Devon Duffy - Auburn

Jenessa Grau - Iowa State

Samantha Thomas - WSU

The prompt was: An essay, 250 words or less, describing what “professional development” means to you.  For example: what would you suggest to an incoming first year who had no idea how to begin their veterinary school career or what are some key steps in becoming a successful veterinary professional?  

 

Tuesday
Apr292014

CLICK HERE to see the April newsletter. 

Monday
Apr282014

Time Flies When Miracles Happen!

Jodie Joseph, Cornell

Entry, Experiences

During my gap year, I worked as a veterinary technician at Holistic Pet Care in Little Falls, New Jersey. What was most remarkable about this place was the dedicated bond between clients and their patient and the heartwarming ability to defy all odds.

My story begins with Darlene and Diamo. Darlene is a 35-years-old human, diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer a few years prior to presenting to our clinic with Diamo, an 11-year-old castrated Siamese cat. Darlene had 40 tumors in her body, ranging as far cranially as her brain and caudally as her extremities. Nearly 70% of her body was removed, through surgeries, chemotherapy, and radiation.

Darlene knew exactly where all 40 tumors were because Diamo had pointed them out, nudging each area where the cancer had been. However, there was one spot Diamo did not identify, her pancreas. As many know in human medicine, pancreatic cancer is practically a death sentence, and in animal cancer the prognosis is poor.

Diamo presented to Holistic Pet Care with pancreatic cancer. His previous vet gave him a prognosis of 8-10 DAYS to live. 

We treated Diamo with goat milk, in hopes to stimulate his appetite and make him comfortable. We also treated him with homeopathic remedies in hopes to palliate him. He came for regular rechecks over the ensuing WEEKS, his weight fluctuating slightly, but his condition stabilized. 

Approximately 4 MONTHS after his initial consult, we received the most remarkable news- diagnostic imaging suggested there was NO EVIDENCE OF TUMORS in Diamo. As for Darlene, she had also received a clean bill of health from her oncologist that week! 

         It has been over a  since I met Darlene and Diamo. They continue to inspire me along the path of small animal integrative oncology. I vow to not only fight for my patients, but also fight for my clients. 

Sunday
Apr272014

Mission Impossible: Fighting Zoonotic Infections in Nicaragua 

Brandon Woods, Iowa State University

Honorable Mention, Experiences  

A Dangerous Paradise 

From jungles with jaguars to crystal blue lakes with freshwater sharks, Nicaragua is one of the most beautiful and dangerous countries in Central America. The brilliant biodiversity attracts millions of tourists each year and the looming volcanoes that pepper the landscape can be an exciting yet unsettling sight. However, in reality much of the danger in Nicaragua comes from the risk of infectious diseases. For example, if you’re planning to travel to this tropical paradise anytime soon, the Center for Disease Control (CDC) states that international travelers are at risk of contracting Typhoid fever, hepatitis A, hepatitis B, Leishmaniasis, malaria, dengue, rabies, and more! As a dual degree veterinary medicaland public health student, I am fascinated by these infectious diseases and want to learn how they interact with the environment, people and animals. Many of the diseases that the CDC listed are called zoonotic diseases, or diseases that are transmissible between animals and humans. Whether you own a pet, like to travel, or simply enjoy spending time outdoors, you are at risk of infection because these zoonotic diseases are increasingly emerging worldwide and are becoming a serious public health threat. During the spring break of my first year of veterinary school, I traveled to Nicaragua on a mission trip and got first-hand experiences of some frightening infectious diseases. 

Bed Nets and Bug Spray 

Planning for this trip was time-intensive and reminded me of planning for my semester study abroad adventure to Tasmania, Australia. However, unlike my semester Down Under, this trip was coordinated through the national non-profit Christian (CVM) whose goal has been to help veterinarians serve others and live out their Christian faith for more than 30 years. Out of all the fundraising and logistics meetings we had, the meeting that stands out the most was when the Iowa State University travel nurse described the laundry list of potential pathogens we could encounter. Our team of 8 veterinary students, 3 veterinarians, and 1 pharmacist would be treating animals in a remote village called Espavel in the jungles of eastern Nicaragua. When I saw that my destination was in the middle of the red zone for malaria on the CDC map, my eyebrows escalated and my stomach dropped. 

I was going to fly to an unstable, earthquake-prone country of approximately 5.7 million Spanish-speaking people where malaria was endemic. My Spanish was scarce, but my drive to serve was strong. After I heard that malaria was essentially eliminated from Nicaragua, my blood pressure dropped a few millimeters of mercury. Approximately 84% of the Nicaraguan population is at risk of contracting malaria, according to a UCLA study. However, Nicaragua has experienced a 97% decrease in reported malaria cases between 2000 and 2010. This significant decrease in prevalence was a result of Nicaragua partnering with the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) in 2006 which heavily implemented stronger surveillance, prevention, vector control, and treatment. Despite this progress, I learned from my undergraduate Lyme disease Honors project that there are always numerous challenges to completely eliminate vector-borne diseases like malaria. For instance, controlling mosquito breeding populations is particularly vexing due to the complex ecology of the parasite life-cycle. In addition, you may have heard about the controversy surrounding toxic pesticides like DDT. My colleagues and I were fortunate for our DEET bug spray and Permethrin treated clothes and bed nets that we brought after skyping our host-country missionaries. I was also relieved that our trip in March 2013 was during the dry season and not during the September-to-January rainy season, when disease transmission is highest. 

Rambunctious Rabies 

Escaping the endless hours in the frigid, formaldehyde laden anatomy lab and flying to a third-world tropical country to practice preventative medicine was slightly shocking, but totally worth it. On our first day, we drove through the littered streets of Catarina to an outdoor shelter where we set up a temporary clinic. The local children brought their pet dogs and we treated them with Ivermectin and other anti-parasitic medication. Many animals were very thin and infested with fleas and ticks. However, it was rewarding to interact with the children and walk them through a brochure that described healthy animal care. Then suddenly one of my colleagues was bitten by a dog! He was trying to give a rambunctious mixed-breed a pill to protect against heartworm disease and the next thing he knew, the dog bit him in the hand. He quickly washed the wound with soap and water and bandaged it. Fortunately, everyone on our veterinary team was already vaccinated for rabies prior to the trip because it’s a requirement to enter veterinary school. He also followed up with post-exposure rabies prophylaxis when he returned home. 

 Rabies is one of the deadliest and most notorious zoonotic diseases in the world. Rabies is endemic to Nicaragua, often occurs in poor rural communities, and the most common source of transmission is when a dog bites a human and delivers the fatal RNA virus. According to the World Health Organization, potentially any mammal can contract rabies, and common reservoirs in the USA include skunks, foxes, raccoons, and bats. Although rabies cases can be successfully treated, it still persists worldwide killing more than 55, 000 people each year. The Center for Food Security and Public Health (CFSPH) at Iowa State University is an excellent resource that provides more information on rabies and preventing zoonotic diseases. 

Tasting Iguana and Tackling Typhoid 

It’s a good thing I like rice and beans, because that was the bread and butter of most of my meals every day. Hiking to farms builds an appetite and one day we had to traverse across a narrow blank that stretched precariously over a ravine. After we arrived, we vaccinated over 100 head of cattle for clostridium, anthrax, and Dectomax. Dectomax is an injectable drug used to control parasites like hookworms, round worms, grubs and mites. When we returned to the main village and got out of the blazing 90+ degree sun, the crispy, plantain chips with a glass of freshly squeezed tamarind juice was an irresistible snack. However, the most memorable meal of all was the morning the villagers surprised us with two 5 foot long iguanas! A few hours later, I was savoring some delicious iguana meat seasoned with local spices and vegetables. Cooking wild reptiles is foreign to us in the developed world; likewise, the way many Nicaraguans prepare their food is also different. 

Sayings like, “Don’t drink the water,” or ‘Boil it, cook it, peel it or forget it,” come to mind when traveling abroad, and they couldn’t ring more true for my experience. Food-borne illnesses are another great example of how veterinary medicine and public health overlap. I’m enrolled in the dual DVM-MPH degree program at the University of Iowa’s College of Public Health and learned that food-borne epidemics are a major focus of research in epidemiology. From mild cases of spoiled potato salad on romantic picnics to church dinner outbreaks from contaminated home-made ice cream, food-borne illnesses can range in their severity depending on your pre-existing health and the dose and type of microorganism ingested. One of the Nicaraguan diseases that I was vaccinated for before my trip was a food-borne illness known as Typhoid fever. Thankfully I avoided this illness; however, I couldn’t escape the wrath of Montezuma's revenge, or traveler’s diarrhea, most commonly caused by enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli

Typhoid fever is transmitted through contaminated food or water and is unique among food-borne pathogens because it only affects humans. In fact, some individuals can unwittingly become carriers of the bacterium and transmit the disease to others through improperly prepared food, like the infamous Typhoid Mary. This disease is caused by the bacterium Salmonella typhi, which is one of over 2,300 serotypes of Salmonella and can be treated with antibiotics, according to the USDA. Other Salmonella species are also common among household, cold-blooded critters like turtles, frogs, iguanas, and snakes, so it’s important to always wash your hands after handling these pets. Like malaria and rabies, Typhoid fever presents challenges for eradication in developing countries where poverty limits accessibility to clean water, pasteurization, and proper sanitation and hygiene. For example, I had never taken a well-water bucket shower before, and although the murky water felt refreshing after a long days’ work, I came to more deeply appreciate the luxuries of everyday plumbing and electricity.