Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,508,224 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Veterinarians and environmental health practitioners: partners in prevention.


Editor's note: NEHA NEHA National Environmental Health Association
NEHA National Executive Housekeepers Association
NEHA Northern Estates Homeowners Association (Indianapolis, Indiana) 
 strives to provide up-to-date and relevant information on environmental health and to build partnerships in the profession. In pursuit of these goals, we will feature a column from the Environmental Health Services health services Managed care The benefits covered under a health contract  Branch (EHSB) of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center.  (CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

CDC - Control Data Corporation
) in every issue of the Journal.

EHSB's objective is to strengthen the role of state, local, and national environmental health programs and professionals to anticipate, identify, and respond to adverse environmental exposures and the consequences of these exposures for human health. The services being developed through EHSB include access to topical, relevant, and scientific information; consultation; and assistance to environmental health specialists, sanitarians, and environmental health professionals and practitioners.

EHSB appreciates NEHA's invitation to provide monthly columns for the Journal. EHSB staff will be highlighting a variety of concerns, opportunities, challenges, and successes that we all share in environmental public health.

Events such as urbanization, globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
, and terrorism have brought the need for a stronger, larger, more diverse, and more competent public health workforce to the forefront of public planning (Pappaioanou, 2004). A growing number of medical issues are resulting from increasing human-wildlife contact, environmental changes, expansion of international travel, antimicrobial misuse, intensification and integration of food production, and growth of the immunocompromised immunocompromised /im·mu·no·com·pro·mised/ (-kom´pro-mizd) having the immune response attenuated by administration of immunosuppressive drugs, by irradiation, by malnutrition, or by certain disease processes (e.g., cancer).  population (World Health Organization, 1999).

Veterinarians have training that gives them a unique capacity to address public health issues and to help meet public health needs. On completion of their clinical training, veterinarians take an oath that states: "I solemnly swear to use my scientific knowledge and skills for the benefit of society through ... the promotion of public health and the advancement of medical knowledge" (American Veterinary Medical Association American Veterinary Medical Association

a nonprofit, professional organization of veterinarians in the USA, whose stated objective is to advance the science and art of veterinary medicine, including its relationship to public health and agriculture.
, 1999, emphasis added). Although veterinary medicine veterinary medicine, diagnosis and treatment of diseases of animals. An early interest in animal diseases is found in ancient Greek writings on medicine. Veterinary medicine began to achieve the stature of a science with the organization of the first school in the  and environmental public health have long had many common competencies, practices, and accomplishments in common, it may be useful to reintroduce this important emerging professional partnership.

What Is Veterinary Medicine?

Veterinary medicine is "real medicine." Schooling consists of a rigorous four-year postbaccalaureate program of medical and surgical training. After successfully passing a national examination, veterinarians in the United States can become licensed to practice on all but human animal species in any U.S. state or territory. Veterinarians are among the few clinicians whose success requires both a solid understanding of the importance of diagnosing and treating the "whole" animal and a thorough application of herd/population health principles and preventive medicine preventive medicine, branch of medicine dealing with the prevention of disease and the maintenance of good health practices. Until recently preventive medicine was largely the domain of the U.S. . Like their physician colleagues, many veterinarians also complete an internship/residency or advanced training that leads to board certification board certification
n.
The process by which a person is tested and approved to practice in a specialty field, especially medicine, after successfully completing the requirements of a board of specialists in that field.
 in one or more of the 20 veterinary specialties. Of note to the environmental health practice community, one such specialty organization may be of particular interest for the environmental health practice community: The American College of Veterinary Preventive Medicine requires demonstrated proficiency in the public health domains of epidemiology and biostatistics, food safety, infectious and parasitic diseases, environmental health and toxicology, and public administration and health education. A recent World Health Organization (WHO) technical report defined veterinary public health as "the sum of all contributions to the physical, mental, and social well-being of humans through an understanding and application of veterinary science" (WHO Study Group on Future Trends in Veterinary Public Health, p. 4, 2002). This definition establishes the context--protection and improvement of human health--in which veterinarians make their contribution. It also describes how those who learn and apply the scientific principles of veterinary medicine are part of a core public health practice activity with global impact. There is an explicit understanding that "veterinary public health activities must be carried out in close partnership with other public health efforts to ensure positive health outcomes" (WHO Study Group on Future Trends in Veterinary Public Health, p. 4, 2002).

Veterinarians in the Contemporary Practice of Public Health

Today, veterinarians serve many public health roles. Although veterinarians are estimated to make up less then 1 percent of the public health workforce (Gebbie, 2000), recent educational and policy influences have renewed the interest in increasing the numbers of veterinary professionals in public health. Examples of such professionals and their functions can be found in the sidebar on this page.

Because veterinarians work at the interface of human, animal, and environmental health, they are uniquely positioned to view health through the lens of public health impact. Changes in land use, creation and operation of large terrestrial and marine food production units, and microbial microbial

pertaining to or emanating from a microbe.


microbial digestion
the breakdown of organic material, especially feedstuffs, by microbial organisms.
 and chemical pollution of land and water sources have created new threats to the health of both animals and humans (Zinsstag, Schelling, Wyss, & Mahamat, 2005). The intensive responses to the intentional release of anthrax anthrax (ăn`thrăks), acute infectious disease of animals that can be secondarily transmitted to humans. It is caused by a bacterium (Bacillus anthracis , the periodic contamination of seafood production beds, the spread of West Nile virus West Nile virus, microorganism and the infection resulting from it, which typically produces no symptoms or a flulike condition. The virus is a flavivirus and is related to a number of viruses that cause encephalitis. , the importation of monkey-pox, the widely publicized occurrence of large foodborne-disease outbreaks, and the threat of pandemic pandemic /pan·dem·ic/ (pan-dem´ik)
1. a widespread epidemic of a disease.

2. widely epidemic.


pan·dem·ic
adj.
Epidemic over a wide geographic area.

n.
 influenza all serve as recent models illustrating the impact and burden of disease on the resources of public health infrastructure (Kahn, 2006; King, 2006). The need for integrated animal and human health surveillance, diagnostic laboratory systems, and delivery of effective health interventions among animal, human, and public health professions has never been more essential.

Veterinarians are turning to environmental health scientists and practitioners to develop their understanding that many outbreaks and public health emergencies are failures of veterinary prevention infrastructure. It has been demonstrated that the professions can work together to investigate the environmental antecedents that lead to adverse health outcomes (Cassady et al., 2006). By strengthening epidemiologic and laboratory investigations that assess the role of environmental influences, this partnership can help to develop and apply sustainable and effective community health interventions. With their understanding of biological interactions and clinical experience--as well as their roots in preventive medicine--veterinarians are ideal environmental health service partners.

As the veterinary profession broadens the perception of what a veterinarian veterinarian /vet·er·i·nar·i·an/ (vet?er-i-nar´e-an) a person trained and authorized to practice veterinary medicine and surgery; a doctor of veterinary medicine.

vet·er·i·nar·i·an
n.
 can do, the term "one world--one medicine" may signify the acceptance that veterinary medicine is also a human health activity. Together with their partners in health protection and promotion, veterinarians can improve public health practice with a renewed focus on the complex interactions that affect environmental, animal, and human health.

Corresponding Author: Hugh Mainzer, Captain, Chief Veterinary Officer (select), U.S. Public Health Service, Supervisory Preventive Medicine Officer/Epidemiologist, Division of Emergency and Environmental Health Services, National Center for Environmental Health, CDC, 4770 Buford Highway, MS F-28, Atlanta, GA 30341. E-mail: hugh.mainzer@cdc.hhs.gov. Web site: www.cdc.gov/nceh/ehs.

References

American Veterinary Medical Association (1999). Veterinarian's oath. Retrieved January 20, 2007, from http://www.avma.org/about_avma/whoweare/oath.asp.

Cassady, J., Higgins, C., Mainzer, H., Seys, S., Sarisky, J., & Musgrave, K. (2006). Beyond compliance: Environmental health problem solving problem solving

Process involved in finding a solution to a problem. Many animals routinely solve problems of locomotion, food finding, and shelter through trial and error.
, interagency collaboration, and risk assessment to prevent waterborne disease outbreaks. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 60, 672-674.

Gebbie, K. (2000). The public health workforce enumeration 1. (mathematics) enumeration - A bijection with the natural numbers; a counted set.

Compare well-ordered.
2. (programming) enumeration - enumerated type.
 2000. New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
: Center for Health Policy, Columbia School of Nursing.

Kahn, L.H. (2006). Confronting zoonoses Zoonoses

Infections of humans caused by the transmission of disease agents that naturally live in animals. People become infected when they unwittingly intrude into the life cycle of the disease agent and become unnatural hosts.
, linking human and veterinary medicine. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 12, 556-561.

King, L. (2006). Veterinary medicine and public health at CDC. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) is a weekly epidemiological digest for the United States published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The 5 June 1981 issue of the MMWR published the cases of five men in what turned out to be the first report of AIDS. , 55 (Suppl. 2), 7-9.

Pappaioanou, M. (2004). Veterinary medicine protecting and promoting the public's health and well-being. Preventive Veterinary Medicine, 62, 153-163.

WHO Study Group on Future Trends in Veterinary Public Health. (2002). Future trends in veterinary public health: Report of a WHO study group. Teramo, Italy: World Health Organization. Retrieved January 11, 2007, from http://whqlibdoc.who.int/trs/WHO_TRS See traffic engineering methods.

TRS - term rewriting system
_907.pdf.

World Health Organization. (1999) Veterinary medicine in public health. Weekly Epidemiological Record, 19, 154-156.

Zinsstag, J., Schelling, E., Wyss, K., & Mahamat, M.B. (2005). Potential of cooperation between human and animal health to strengthen health systems. Lancet, 336, 1242-1245.

Hugh Mainzer, M.S, D.V.M., Dipl. ACVPM ACVPM American College of Veterinary Preventive Medicine  

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

RELATED ARTICLE: Veterinarians in the Contemporary Practice of Public Health: Some Clinical, Scientific, and Administrative Functions

* Public health policy makers

* Public health or environmental health program managers and executives

* Epidemiologists

* Community practitioners

* Local, state, federal, or international health officers

* Public health laboratory scientists

* Public health educators and communications experts

* Animal control consultants and shelter medicine practitioners

* Occupational safety and health advisors

* Teachers of public health sciences and preventive medicine

* Subject matter experts on zoonosis Zoonosis Definition

Zoonosis, also called zoonotic disease refers to diseases that can be passed from animals, whether wild or domesticated, to humans.
, vectorborne-disease, and even non-infectious-disease prevention and control programs

Some Typical Activities

* Environmental risk assessment and study of health hazard health hazard Occupational safety Any agent or activity posing a potential hazard to health. Cf Physical hazard.  effects

* Ecologic and environmental health sciences

* Disease surveillance

* Conservation medicine practice

* Quarantine services and select agent oversight

* Food and water safety

* Biomedical research

* Drug and medical device quality/safety assurance

* Agricultural program, nutritional guideline, and sustainable community development consultation

* Food animal disease control activities

* Global health improvement programs (including malaria control and HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome  prevention)

* Biologic, chemical, and radiologic terrorism preparedness, prevention, and response

* Natural/technologic disaster and pandemic preparedness, prevention, and response
COPYRIGHT 2007 National Environmental Health Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Mainzer, Hugh
Publication:Journal of Environmental Health
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 1, 2007
Words:1444
Previous Article:Thank you for supporting the NEHA/AAS scholarship fund.(National Environmental Health Association)(Brief article)(List)
Next Article:A legal history of raw milk in the United States.(Legal Briefs)
Topics:



Related Articles
Environmental health and protection: Century 21 challenges.
Preventing zoonotic diseases in immunocompromised persons: the role of physicians and veterinarians.
Preventing Zoonotic Diseases in Immunocompromised Persons: The Role of Physicians and Veterinarians.
First case of bioterrorism-related inhalational anthrax, Florida, 2001: North Carolina investigation. (Bioterrorism-Related Anthrax).
Converging issues in veterinary and public health. (Conference Summary).
Emergency and terrorism preparedness for environmental health practitioners.(Environmental Health-'Net)(www.cdc.gov/nceh/ehs/ETP)(Brief Article)
Developing environmental public health leadership.(Direct from CDC's Environmental Health Services Branch)(Editorial)
Developing the environmental health workforce.(Direct from CDC's Environmental Health Services Branch)(National Environmental Health...
Working to build healthy communities: community environmental health assessments using PACE EH.(Direct from CDC's Environmental Health Services...
CDC grant program supports environmental health services delivery.(Direct from CDC's Environmental Health Services Branch)(Centers for Disease...

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles