Photo available in the Archive Image Gallery or direct download High Res. Image, Electronic Media Mail Image
The University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine has
received a $1.7 million grant from Maddie's Fund to create a comprehensive
shelter medicine program that will enhance support for local animal rescue
operations, improve disease control and adoption rates among shelter animals
and expand professional training to fill the current shortage of skilled
providers in this area.
The three-year grant will establish the Maddie's Shelter
Medicine Program at UF and will build upon UF's existing shelter medicine
program. Through that program, which was created in 2003, veterinary students
gain clinical experience by providing spay/neuter surgeries to animals awaiting
adoption at the local animal shelter.
"This is a transitional time for the animal welfare field as
growing demand for animal-friendly solutions is challenging traditional
sheltering paradigms," said Julie Levy, D.V.M., Ph.D., who was a
co-investigator on the grant and who will become the Maddie's professor of
shelter medicine at UF.
"There is an international desire to shift from a reactive
animal control model in which massive numbers of animals are processed through
shelters with an overall high euthanasia rate to one in which proactive
preventive measures reduce shelter admissions with individualized programs
tailored to different types of animals to result in higher save rates," Levy
added.
The college's existing shelter medicine program was founded
by Natalie Isaza, D.V.M., UF's Merial clinical assistant professor of shelter
medicine, and has grown in popularity among veterinary students in recent years.
"In the meantime, Dr. Cynda Crawford's investigations of
mysterious disease outbreaks in shelters led to the discovery of new infectious
diseases and demand for help from shelters across the country," Levy said.
Crawford, a UF scientist, will become the Maddie's clinical
assistant professor of shelter medicine. A co-discoverer of the canine
influenza virus, Crawford will work closely with Isaza and Levy to implement
additional clinical and educational programs aimed at educating not only
veterinary students but also technicians and others associated with shelter
efforts.
Existing partnerships with Alachua County
and local animal rescue groups will also be enhanced through the new grant.
Levy said UF was uniquely positioned to become a center of
excellence in shelter medicine in the southeastern United States because of its
diverse faculty expertise, its location in a region with a large number of
animal shelters and rescue groups, and a highly supportive administrative
structure.
Maddie's Fund has also worked closely with Drs. Levy,
Crawford and Isaza on Maddie's Pet Rescue Project in Alachua County.
"We are thrilled to expand our relationship with this
incredibly talented team of veterinarians," said Maddie's Fund President, Rich
Avanzino. "I'm certain their work in shelter medicine will take this emerging
field to a whole new level."
_______________________________________________________________________
ABOUT MADDIE'S FUND
Alameda, Calif.-based Maddie's FundĀ®, The Pet Rescue
Foundation, (www.maddiesfund.org) is a family foundation funded by Workday and
PeopleSoft Founder Dave Duffield and his wife, Cheryl. Maddie's Fund is helping
to create a no-kill nation where all healthy and treatable shelter dogs and
cats are guaranteed a loving home.
To achieve this goal, Maddie's Fund is investing its
resources in building community collaborations where animal welfare
organizations can come together to develop successful models of lifesaving; in
veterinary colleges to help shelter medicine become part of the veterinary
curriculum; within private practice veterinarians to encourage greater
participation in the animal welfare cause; and through the implementation of
national strategies to collect and report shelter statistics.
Maddie's Fund is named after the family's beloved miniature
schnauzer, who passed away in 1997.