Online Panel Discussion - Rational Antimicrobial Use in Small Animal Medicine - Test offering
Species
Small Animal
Contact Hours
3 Hours - RACE Accredited
Early Booking Deadline
Sun, 01 October, 2023
Registration Deadline
Fri, 20 October, 2023
Language
English
Discipline
Other
Veterinary Partners
Global



TEST OFFERING - DO NOT BOOK
Panelists:
Claire Fellman DVM, PhD, DACVIM (SAIM), DACVCP - Tufts University, USA
Karolina Scahill DVM, MSc - IVC Evidensia, Sweden
Jane Sykes BVSc (Hons), PhD, MBA, DACVIM (SAIM) - UC Davis, USA
Moderator:
Peter Panduro Damborg DVM, PhD, DECVM - University of Copenhagen, Denmark
PANEL DISCUSSION DESCRIPTION
Antibiotic use in small animals is increasingly coming into the spotlight due to the emergence of resistant pathogens such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus pseudintermedius (MRSP) in pets but also due to the potential for resistant bacteria to transfer to in-contact persons and the environment. Failing to cope with such threats endangers both animal and human health, and will inevitably lead to restrictions in veterinarians’ clinical freedom to prescribe antibiotics.
In this lively in-depth exchange, various aspects of rational antimicrobial use will be discussed by an international panel of world-renowned experts in companion animal medicine. The specialists will discuss the choice of topical vs. systemic treatment of skin infections, new alternatives to culture for infection confirmation and identification of effective antimicrobials, the zoonotic risk of resistant pathogens in pets and much more. Questions and points raised by the audience are very welcome and will be included in the discussion.
Peter qualified as a DVM from the Royal Veterinary and Agricultural College of Denmark in 2004. After one year of working for the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration, he started in 2005 as a PhD student working on zoonotic enteric bacteria from dogs. He defended his thesis and was awarded the PhD degree in 2008. He was subsequently employed as Postdoc at the Department of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, University of Copenhagen. During his postdoc, he continued working on the zoonotic risk of bacteria in pets, with a primary focus on antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Peter also started as Head of a local microbiological diagnostic laboratory at the university, and in 2013, he was employed in his current position at the university as an Associate Professor of veterinary clinical microbiology. Peter has since continued working on AMR and diagnostics, primarily in companion animals. In addition, he has gained interest in a more solution-oriented approach towards AMR. For example, he was the editor of a national antibiotic use guideline for companion animal practice. This guideline has become internationally acknowledged and translated to more than 12 languages. Peter is also Chair of the EUCAST subcommittee VetCAST and of the COST Action European Network for Optimization of Veterinary Antimicrobial Treatment – a network comprising more than 300 persons from Europe and beyond. He is the author of 76 articles in international scientific journals with peer review, and he has contributed to three chapters of the upcoming 6th edition of the book Antimicrobial Therapy in Veterinary Medicine.
More InfoDr. Claire Fellman is an associate professor in the small animal internal medicine service at Tufts University, Massachusetts, USA.
Claire earned her veterinary degree and completed residencies in small animal internal medicine and clinical pharmacology at Mississippi State University. Claire’s PhD research investigatedthe effects of cyclosporine on immune function in dogs, but since moving to Tufts, Claire’s research has focused on antimicrobial use and stewardship in companion animals. Claire chairs the Infection Control and Antimicrobial Stewardship Team at Cummings veterinary school and she also leads a One Health collaboration with physicians and pharmacists from Tufts Medical Center with the goal to bring successful antimicrobial stewardship strategies from human medicine to companion animal veterinary settings.
More InfoKarolina graduated from the University of Veterinary Medicine in Kosice in 2010, and subsequently received two years of further education in companion animal internal medicine at Strömsholm referral hospital in Sweden and the Royal Veterinary College in London, UK. Karolina completed a MSc in international animal health (infectious diseases) at the University of Edinburgh in 2018, and is currently doing a part-time industrial PhD in infectious diseases and evidence-based medicine at the same university. Her research mainly focuses on antimicrobial usage in companion animals and guideline methodology. Karolina is the clinical research director at IVC Evidensia Södra Djursjukuset in Sweden, and also works as a regional medicine consultant and antimicrobial stewardship representative for the same company in the Stockholm region. Karolina is the vice chair of the working group of clinical guidelines of antimicrobial use for the European Network Optimization Veterinary Antimicrobial Treatment (ENOVAT) and is an external consultant in the development of antimicrobial veterinary guidelines for the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) in Asia and the Pacific.
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