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Educate children on animal welfare, petition urges
child and dog
'I think that introducing these issues as an actual part of the curriculum is necessary, not just a mention during another subject.'
Teaching all children how to treat animals 'could reduce abuse'
 
A petition is urging the Department of Education to include animal welfare in the National Curriculum, in a bid to tackle the growing problem of animal abuse and neglect.

The petition on Change.org has so far received over 2,000 signatures.

Louise Craggs, who launched it, says she works in a veterinary environment and has met children who believe that animals cannot feel pain, or who hate cats and other species to the extent that they think it is acceptable to harm them.

While many circulating petitions are calling for tougher sentences on animal cruelty, Louise writes on Change.org: 'Things are not changing'.

She is calling for animal welfare to be incorporated into the National Curriculum, to better educate children on how to care for animals.

'I believe that if we educate children from an early age how to treat animals and how important it is to care for their environment, then in years to come we will hopefully see a decline in animal cruelty and neglect.

'I think that introducing these issues as an actual part of the curriculum is necessary, not just a mention during another subject.'

To sign the petition, visit: https://www.change.org/p/department-of-education-teach-children-the-importance-of-animal-welfare-as-part-of-school-curriculum

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RCVS Knowledge appoints Veterinary Evidence editor-in-chief

News Story 1
 RCVS Knowledge has welcomed Professor Peter Cockcroft as editor-in-chief for Veterinary Evidence.

A world-renowned expert in evidence-based veterinary medicine, Prof Cockcroft will lead the strategic development and editorial quality of the open-access journal. He was previously in the role from 2017-2020.

Katie Mantell, CEO of RCVS Knowledge, said: "We are excited about the extensive knowledge of evidence-based veterinary medicine and clinical veterinary research that Peter brings, and we look forward to working with him over this next phase of the journal's development." 

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News Shorts
CVS Group hit by cyber attack

CVS Group, which owns more than 450 veterinary practices in the UK, has been hit by a cyber attack.

In a statement, the group said the incident involved unauthorised external access to a limited number of its IT systems. As soon as the attack was discovered, the group took its IT systems temporarily offline, causing 'considerable operational disruption'.

It has warned that the security steps taken and ongoing plans to move its operational systems and IT infrastructure to the Cloud are likely to have an ongoing impact over a number of weeks.

Due to the risk that personal information was accessed, CVS has informed the Information Commissioner's Office. The company is working with third party consultants to investigate the incident.