CVMBS FY20 Annual Report

Page 47

INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS & STUDY ABROAD Students will become familiar with certain aspects of hoofstock medicine including common diseases and preventative medicine. Students gain direct experience with many aspects of chemical immobilization including skills needed, drugs, and darting equipment. African Wildlife Conservation and Health (Summer) Led by Drs. Jim Derr, Walter Cook, and Linda Logan, this program takes students to Limpopo Province, South Africa, and Botswana to study the role of veterinarians in large landscape wildlife conservation medicine and develop skills to apply to wildlife health and sustainability issues across the State of Texas. Wildlife experts guide participants through activities including animal restraint, administering drugs, field surgery, and darting. Other experiential learning can include interaction with crocodiles, buffalo, and rhinos. Thailand Global One Health (Summer) This program led by Michelle Yeoman is a hybrid study abroad experience, incorporating four weeks of study abroad instruction with six weeks on campus in College Station. In this course, students use case studies to explore the connection between human, animal, and environmental health. The course is designed for undergraduate students who are interested in veterinary or human medicine, including public health, and wish to explore Global One Health issues. The students work with elephants, rescued sea turtles, and other exotic species at a sanctuary.

Students and faculty visited the Doi Suthep temple in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

Current Research Projects A number of CVMBS faculty have projects with international components. Each year, the CVMBS enters into new agreements with universities and research institutes around the world. CVMBS faculty collaborate on international programs with Texas A&M faculty from the Norman Borlaug Institute of International Programs and Development and the Institute of Infectious Animal Diseases (IIAD), as well as international organizations such as the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the World Health Organization (WHO), in addition to the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE). Faculty have diverse sources of funding for their research projects, educational endeavors, and capacity development projects from private foundations, federal agencies, and international organizations that promote development, food security, and public health.

INTERDISCIPLINARY FACULTY OF TOXICOLOGY (IFT) The IFT is a degree-granting graduate program that is composed of faculty from twenty Texas A&M departments in five colleges, three divisions of the Health Science Center, and three associated laboratories. Since 1989, the IFT has awarded over 50 MS degrees, nearly 200 PhD degrees, and two DVM/PhD degrees. In addition, well over 100 postdocs have trained in toxicology at Texas A&M University. The IFT is housed administratively at the CVMBS. Training future generations of toxicologists in novel scientific discoveries should go hand-in-hand with ensuring that trainees develop a broad set of complementary competencies that span multiple disciplines from basic biology to exposure science, biostatistics, and epidemiology. In addition, trainees must understand how these data and knowledge are translated into decisions and policy. Areas of research include: Regulatory Toxicology & Public Health, Cellular & Molecular Toxicology, Reproductive & Developmental Toxicology, Behavioral & Neurotoxicology, Environmental & Veterinary Toxicology, and Applied Toxicology & Food Safety.

Highlights from FY20 include: Awards/Accomplishments • CVMBS PhD student, Hadil Al Muhisen, and alumnus Ziad Naufal establish Arab Toxicologists Association. • Texas A&M Wins $1.2 Million Diversity Grant. • Lauren Lewis was selected for a 2020 Texas A&M Association of Former Students (AFS) Distinguished Graduate Student Award. • Dr. Stephen Safe and Dr. Alexei Sokolov are recipients of the AFS Distinguished Achievement Award. • CVMBS Postdoctoral Researchers, Dr. Keshav Karki and Dr. Alyssa Meyers, have been recognized with 2020 Distinguished Graduate Student Awards from the AFS. 2020 CVMBS Annual Report • 47


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FUNDING PRIORITIES

2min
page 58

CVMBS COMMUNICATIONS

2min
page 51

PARTNERSHIP FOR ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION & RURAL HEALTH

1min
page 52

EQUINE INITIATIVE

1min
page 55

TRANSLATIONAL IMAGING CENTER (TIC

1min
page 54

CENTER FOR EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGIES (CET

1min
page 50

SUPERFUND RESEARCH CENTER

2min
page 49

INTERDISCIPLINARY FACULTY OF TOXICOLOGY (IFT

4min
pages 47-48

VETERINARY EMERGENCY TEAM (VET

3min
pages 43-44

INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS & STUDY ABROAD

4min
pages 45-46

SMALL ANIMAL CLINICAL SCIENCES (VSCS

2min
page 38

SCHUBOT CENTER FOR AVIAN HEALTH

2min
page 42

LARGE ANIMAL CLINICAL SCIENCES (VLCS

3min
pages 36-37

VETERINARY PHYSIOLOGY & PHARMACOLOGY (VTPP

5min
pages 34-35

LEADING THE WAY IN GLOBAL ONE HEALTH

3min
pages 10-11

VETERINARY EDUCATION, RESEARCH, & OUTREACH (VERO

4min
pages 14-15

FACULTY

1min
page 28

COVID-19 AND THE TRANSITION TO ONLINE LEARNING

11min
pages 4-7

LEADING THE WAY IN VETERINARY INNOVATION

5min
pages 12-13

FROM THE DEAN

2min
page 3

VETERINARY PATHOBIOLOGY (VTPB

1min
page 33

VETERINARY INTEGRATIVE BIOSCIENCES (VIBS

2min
page 32
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