Veterinary Medical Education: Challenges and Perspectives
Materialtyp:
ArtikelUtgivningsinformation: MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2024Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (224 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783725813995
- 9783725814008
- Medicine
- Veterinary medicine
- GHG emissions
- Likert scale
- NTCAs
- One Health
- PTSD service dog
- Python
- Taiwan
- alternative medicine
- anti-cancer effects
- anti-inflammatory activity
- antimicrobial and antiviral activity
- antioxidant activity
- apitherapy
- artificial intelligence
- assistance dog
- attitudes of stakeholders
- autism spectrum disorder
- bee venom
- clients
- climate change
- clinical examination
- communication
- communication education
- companion animals
- competency-based veterinary education
- complaint management
- complaints
- cross-section study
- curriculum
- education
- educational data mining
- educational methodology
- emotional support animal
- entrustable professional activities
- environment
- exotic animals
- factors
- high-fidelity dental model
- leadership
- leadership theory
- learning analytics
- machine learning
- medical dispute
- medical disputes
- medical education
- medical expense
- medical skills
- mental health
- moral reasoning
- one health
- pet owner
- post-traumatic stress disorder
- psychiatric dog
- questionnaire
- random forest
- respect
- risk factor for medical disputes
- risk perceptions
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Veterinarians are valued and respected professional figures. Veterinary research transcends species boundaries and includes the study of both spontaneously occurring and experimentally induced models of both human and animal diseases. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the importance of the One Health program, and this adaptive and responsive approach should be implemented in veterinary medical education. These fundamental changes in the roles, responsibilities, and spectrum of activities of veterinary professionals require equal changes, improvements, and adaptations to veterinary science and medical education training programs. These modifications may include, for instance, increasing the participation of veterinary professionals in multidisciplinary human medicine teaching, training, and research teams (i.e., human anatomy, physiology, or biology, among others). Significantly, recent scientific and technological breakthroughs (i.e., RNA-based vaccines, improved molecular diagnostic tools (PCRs), innovative ICTs applied to health assessment and research, etc.) have been seen to influence current teaching and training programs in key, modern, and innovative veterinary colleges and universities.
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eng
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