VTMED 6602

VTMED 6602

Course information provided by the 2015-2016 Catalog.

Laboratory animal medicine is a diverse field in which veterinarians directly impact on the well-being of animals used in research, teaching and testing. Veterinarians assist researchers in achieving their goals, while encouraging replacement, reduction and refinement of animal use. Treatment of animals and preparation of preventive medicine programs requires the laboratory animal veterinarian to have knowledge of the biology and comparative medicine of a wide variety of species. Current knowledge of research methodologies and animal models of disease as well as a good understanding of state and federal regulations and guidelines governing the use of animals is essential for a laboratory animal veterinarian. In addition, occupational health and safety and animal facility design are important parts of an institutional animal care program and laboratory animal veterinarians have input in these areas. The diversity of species and the novel circumstances that arise regularly in this field make laboratory animal medicine an exciting and unique discipline of veterinary medicine.


Prerequisites/Corequisites Prerequisite: VTMED 5510.

Permission Note Enrollment limited to: third- and fourth-year veterinary students. Maximum enrollment 2 per rotation.

When Offered Fall, spring, summer.

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi: none
  •   Vet Med Summer. 

  • 2 Credits Graded

  •  1556 VTMED 6602   CLN 300

    • TBA
    • May 23 - Aug 14, 2016
    • Martin, M

  • Instruction Mode: In Person