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UC Davis raising funds for new veterinary hospital
The campaign aims to raise £500 million towards a new veterinary hospital.
Facility to provide 'new standard of excellence in veterinary medicine'.

A decade-long campaign to raise more than $500 million to create a new veterinary hospital is underway at the University of California, Davis.

The UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine is taking a lead role in the campaign, titled “Expect Greater: From UC Davis, For the World.” It is the largest philanthropic endeavour in the university’s history, and the school’s 25 per cent portion of the goal is also its biggest fundraising challenge.

Since the launch of the campaign in 2016, the university’s closest donors and friends have given $1.2 billion toward the goal, with more than $250 million of that raised by the veterinary school.  Now UC Davis is reaching out to the entire university community and beyond to help make a greater impact on the world.

Opened in 1970, the school’s existing Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital was built to see 3,000 patients per year. While there have been additions to the facility over the years, the hospital’s caseload has increased more than 1,600 per cent to more than 50,000 cases per year.

“This caseload increase is stretching our personnel and resources to an extreme extent,” said Dr Karl Jandrey, associate dean of Admissions and Student Programs and a critical care specialist in the hospital’s Emergency Room. “Our large and diverse caseload provides a tremendous learning environment for our students and house officers, but we have to ensure those opportunities are not jeopardized by the limited footprint in which we train them.”

The multi-phased Veterinary Medical Center campaign commenced over the past two years with several Phase I renovation projects in the hospital - including six new examination rooms, a feline-only suite, laundry and support facilities, locker rooms, and restrooms - and the construction of a new Large Animal Support Facility.

The school aims to continue Phase I in 2021, commencing with the construction of the All Species Imaging Center, where the world’s largest veterinary radiology team will diagnose patients and train students and residents.

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Reporting service for dead wild birds updated

News Story 1
 The Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) has updated its online reporting service for dead wild birds.

The new version allows those reporting a dead bird to drop a pin on a map when reporting the location. It also includes a wider range of wild bird species groups to select from when describing the bird.

The online service, which helps APHA to monitor the spread of diseases such as avian influenza, can be accessed here

Click here for more...
News Shorts
NI chief vet urges bluetongue vigilance

Northern Ireland's chief veterinary officer (CVO) has urged farmers to be vigilant for signs of bluetongue, after the Animal and Plant Health Agency warned there was a very high probability of further cases in Great Britain.

There have been 126 confirmed cases of bluetongue virus serotype 3 in England since November 2023, with no cases reported in Northern Ireland. The movement of live ruminants from Great Britain to Northern Ireland is currently suspended.

According to the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA), the virus is most likely to enter Northern Ireland through infected animals or germplasm (semen or ova) being imported.

Brian Dooher, Northern Ireland's CVO, said: "Surveillance for this disease within Northern Ireland has been increased to assist with detection at the earliest opportunity which will facilitate more effective control measures."

Farmers should report any suspicions of the disease to their private veterinary practitioner, the DAERA Helpline on 0300 200 7840 or their local DAERA Direct Veterinary Office.