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BSAVA names winner of 2020 Bourgelat Award
Professor Edward Hall.

Professor Edward Hall recognised for international contributions to small animal medicine

Edward Hall, professor emeritus of small animal medicine and a regular speaker at veterinary conferences, has been named winner of the prestigious BSAVA 2020 Bourgelat Award.

Named after Claude Bourgelat, founder of the world’s first veterinary school in Lyon, France in 1761, the Bourgelat Award recognises ‘outstanding international contributions to the field of small animal practice’.

Professor Hall is a teacher on the BSAVA’s postgraduate certificate programme and has recently finished co-editing the third edition of the BSAVA Manual of Canine and Feline Gastroenterology. He will be formally presented with his award at BSAVA Congress in April (2-5).

Professor Hall said: “I have had an enjoyable relationship with the BSAVA ever since attending my first Congress in Hammersmith as a student, through to becoming Congress Chair, and then President in 2008/9. It is the friendships I have made through my volunteering for the Association that I treasure most.

“I feel that receiving this award from the BSAVA is a recognition that my academic career has also been of merit, but again it is the collegiality and friendship of students, interns, residents and peers which mean the most to me."

The first RCVS Recognised Specialist in Small Animal Medicine (Gastroenterology), Professor Hall graduated from Cambridge University in 1979, after which he took an Internship and Residency at the University of Pennsylvania. He followed this with a PhD at Liverpool Veterinary School, where he stayed on as a postgraduate researcher and lecturer in veterinary pathology.

Professor Hall later went on to lecture at Bristol University Vet School, where he became Professor of Small Animal Medicine in 2004 and is currently a clinician with the university’s referral service, Langford Vets. He frequently delivers talks both at home and abroad and, during his career, has helped to train thousands of veterinary students and guided 25 more in their efforts to achieve Specialist status.

He will deliver four lectures on topics in gastroenterology as part of the Bourgelat stream at BSAVA Congress 2020.

Image (C) BSAVA.

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Applications open for MMI research grants

News Story 1
 RCVS' Mind Matters Initiative (MMI) has launched round two of its veterinary mental health research grants.

Researchers have until 11.59pm on Wednesday, 28 May 2025 to apply for a grant for research which reflects MMI's 2025 focus areas.

Only one Impact Grant was awarded last year, and so this year there are two Discovery Grants and one Impact Grants available. Each Discovery Grant is worth £5,000 and the Impact Grant is worth £15,000.

For more information or to apply, email researchgrants@rcvs.org.uk to contact the MMI team.

 

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News Shorts
BBC Radio 4 documentary addresses corporate fees

BBC Radio 4's File on 4 Investigates has released a documentary exploring how corporate-owned veterinary practices may be inflating bills to increase profit.

Released on 15 April, 'What's Happening To Your Vet Bills?' revealed the policies which many corporate groups have in place to increase their profits. This included targets and upgrades which veterinary teams are tasked with meeting on a regular basis.

It also features Anrich Vets, an independently-owned practice based in Wigan. Following the case of Staffordshire terrier Benjy, who is diagnosed with a tumour, the documentary shares how the team were able to offer contextualised care and advice to make the procedure as affordable as possible for his owners.

The documentary can be heard on demand on BBC iPlayer.