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New BVA president challenges portrayal of vets during CMA review
“We do all this because we do really care” – Elizabeth Mullineaux.
Elizabeth Mullineaux chooses “a profession that cares” as her presidential theme.

The new president of the British Veterinary Association (BVA), Elizabeth Mullineaux, has promised to focus on the veterinary sector as “a profession that cares” during her term in office.

Making her first speech as president during BVA Day on 26 September, Dr Mullineaux spoke about how she did not recognise the way that veterinary professionals have been portrayed during the ongoing investigation into the veterinary sector by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA).

Dr Mullineaux said: “We get up in the middle of the night to calve a cow; support our clients as they say goodbye to their beloved dog; and share the excitement of a family with young children when they bring in their new kitten for the first vaccination.

“We do all this because we do really care. It’s therefore incredibly difficult to see our motivations questioned in the way we have seen as a result of the CMA’s investigation.”

She also criticised the media coverage of the investigation, saying: “The media reporting of the CMA investigation has portrayed vets in a way that is at odds with everything I understand and value about the profession, and it has put additional strain on people in practice who already feel overworked and undervalued.”

In response to these pressures, Dr Mullineaux said that the BVA was going to be “changing the narrative”. She revealed that a new communications campaign was going to be launched this autumn to highlight the positive work that the veterinary sector does and remind the public how much veterinary professionals care.

She also highlighted the opportunity that the CMA investigation could lead to a new Veterinary Surgeons Act and promised to continue lobbying the government on issues such as the provision of veterinary medicines to Northern Ireland, puppy smuggling, and improved measures to control and eradicate bovine TB.

Dr Mullineaux will serve as president of the BVA for one year. A wildlife specialist veterinary surgeon, she is a graduate of the Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies and has previously served as president of the British Veterinary Zoological Society.

Rob Williams has been elected as BVA junior vice-president and outgoing BVA president Anna Judson will serve as senior vice-president.

Image © BVA

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BEVA gives RVNs right to vote

News Story 1
 The British Equine Veterinary Association (BEVA) is to allow its registered veterinary nurse (RVN) members the right to vote.

RVN members will now be able to take part in key decision-making processes and stand for BEVA council.

Marie Rippingale, chair of BEVA's Nurse Committee, said: "I am very proud to be a part of BEVA.

"This change will help to empower nurses to speak up and contribute, but more importantly, it will give them an opportunity to collaborate with other members of the equine veterinary profession to bring about change that is positive for all." 

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News Shorts
Farmer survey to reveal on-farm impact of bluetongue

A nationwide survey has been launched to better understand how the bluetongue virus is affecting UK farms.

Results will inform the support that farmers receive for bluetongue, as well as preparing the livestock industry for the future.

The short online survey is open to all livestock farmers, regardless of whether they've had a confirmed case of bluetongue on their farm. It asks how many animals have been affected, the severity of their clinical signs and how it has impacted farm business.

The survey takes five minutes to complete and is fully anonymous.

It is led by Fiona Lovatt, of Flock Health Limited, and the Ruminant Health & Welfare bluetongue working group, in collaboration with AHDB and the University of Nottingham.

Dr Lovatt says: "We need to find out what level of clinical signs farmers are seeing in their animals, whether they are experiencing mortality with BTV-3 cases, and what their appetite is to vaccinate in future for bluetongue serotype 3."

The survey can be found here.