Veterinary education in India: Shaping the future agenda with focus on veterinary public health education
624 / 456
Keywords:
India, Veterinary education, Veterinary public healthAbstract
Veterinary education provides human resource required for augmenting public good. In a country, where up to
80% population is rural and animal husbandry is the livelihood, veterinary profession provides the desired professional coverage. The available 46 colleges are inadequate to turn out the required number of vets. Out of these, only six conform to the standards laid down by the Veterinary Council of India. One lacuna that remains, common to all, is ‘shortage of teachers’. This paper attempts to address this problem. A veterinary college requires constant, continuous and caring support of government. Compliance of the VCI/ICAR accreditation inspection reports lies with the government. A synchronous functional operation of Government and veterinary colleges provides uninterrupted supply of human resource to carry out the state development programmes. Technical advisory support is provided by the VCI/ICAR. ICAR extends support through funding some research projects and also investment in building infrastructure in the form of development grants. VPHE discipline occupies a central position in veterinary teaching. On one side, it is connected with the wellness of animals – ‘prevention and control of animal diseases’ and on the other side it takes care of the health of humans – professionally exposed to zoonotic infections. Farmers, animal products’ processors, lab workers, epidemiologists, health workers, sylvan, camping and recreational groups constitute a large chunk of population that is served by VPHE professionals. They also provide a protective role to consumers from Farm to Fork. Reputation of a college depends upon the reputation of faculty and available infrastructure. Professors of VPHE and Deans of veterinary faculty are expected to be highly knowledgeable. They need to connect horizontally with public – all stakeholders and in all such areas where veterinary services are required to address the problems. Such initiatives would benefit both. The expertise/services of veterinarians, especially VPHE personnel are not sufficiently utilized for want of a Government policy adopting “One Health”, although advocated jointly by OIE, WHO, FAO and adopted by most countries. This has been advocated strongly in this paper.
Downloads
References
Agnihotri M K and Rana N. 2012. National Veterinary Education: Challenges and Opportunities. Proceedings XI Annual Convocation of National Academy of Veterinary Sciences (India) and National Seminar on Livestock Policy for National Food and Nutritional Security in the Scenario of WTO Regulations. pp. 76–86. 2–3 November 2012, College of Veterinary Science and Animal Husbandry, UP Pandit Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Pashu Chikitsa Vigyan Vishwavidyalay Evam Go Anusandhan Sansthan (DUVASU), Mathura.
Agricultural Education Division. 2009. New and restructured post- graduate curricula and syllabi: veterinary para-clinical subjects. ICAR, New Delhi. http: //www.icar.org.in/files/edu/Revised- PG-Course-Curricula-and-Syllabi/Vety.%20Para%20clinical%2030.4.2009.pdf.
Anonymous. 2016. List of Veterinary Colleges. Veterinary Council of India, Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers’ Welfare, Govt. of India. http: //www.vci.nic.in/forms/list.aspx?lid=803 and Id=24 (Accessed on 10.08.2016).
Anonymous. 1997. Education for Agriculture: Bridge to a Century of Hope on the Farm Front. Dr M. S. Swaminathan Committee Report. Education Division, ICAR, New Delhi.
Bueno-Marí R, Almeida A P G and Navarro J C. 2015. Editorial: Emerging zoonoses: eco-epidemiology, involved mechanisms, and public health implications. Frontiers in Public Health 3: 157. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2015.00157
Cameron S, Cowden J, McMenamin J and Reilly B. 2005. Veterinary public health: We need an integrated medical and veterinary approach. British Medical Journal 331(7527): 1213–14. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.331.7527.1213
Conrad P A, Mazet J A, Clifford D, Scott C and Wilkes M. 2009. Evolution of a transdisciplinary ‘‘One Medicine–One Health’’ approach to global health education at the University of California, Davis. Preventive Veterinary Medicine 92: 268– 74. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.prevetmed.2009.09.002
Economic Survey of India. 2015–16. Prices, Agriculture and Food management. http://indiabudget.nic.in/es2014–15/echapvol2- 05.pdf.
Economic Survey of India. 2014–15. Agriculture and food management. http://indiabudget.nic.in/es2015–16/echapter-vol2.pdf .
FAO 2009. The State of Food and Agriculture – Part I-Livestock in balance, FAO, Rome. http://www.fao.org/docrep/012/i0680e/i0680e00.pdf.
Gilbert N. 2012. Cost of human-animal disease greatest for world’s poor. Nature/News 5 July. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nature.2012.10953
Grace D. 2014. ‘The business case for One Health’, Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research 81 (2), http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/ojvr.v81i2.725. DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/ojvr.v81i2.725
ICAR Vision. 2050. Indian Council of Agricultural Research, New Delhi (www.icar.org.in).
Kakkar M, Abbas S S, Kumar A, Hussain M A, Sharma K, Bhatt P M and Sanjay Zodpey S. 2013. Veterinary public health capacity building in India: a grim reflection of the developing world’s under preparedness to address zoonotic risks. WHO South-East Asia Journal of Public Health 2 (3–4): 187–91. DOI: https://doi.org/10.4103/2224-3151.206767
Narayan K G. 2014. Food Security and Public Health: Present Status and Future Road Map. Souvenir, National Congress on Veterinary Public Health and 11th Conference of APHV and Symposium on Food Security and public Health: Present status and Future Road Map, APHV and ICAR. 24–25 November 2014,New Delhi.
Narayan K G. 2011. Veterinary Public Health – a route to ‘One health’. Dr. M. R. Dhanda oration. 9th All India Conference of Association of Public Health Veterinarians and National Symposium on “Challenges and Strategies for Veterinary Public Health in India”, 18–19 February, Bihar Veterinary College, Patna.
NAVS. 2014. Human Resource needs in Veterinary and Animal Sciences. Policy Paper No. 2. National Academy of Veterinary Sciences (India),New Delhi.
Ortega C, Parilla G, De Balogh K, De Rosa M, Gimeno O, Estol L, Dobosh D, Leguia G, Falcon N, Fonseca-Poveda A, Torres M, Caballero-Castillo M, Quiros J, Clemente Vilhena M, Cediel N, Villamil LC and De Meneghi D. 2007. New approaches for education and training in veterinary public health: The SAPUVET projects. Journal of Veterinary Medical Education 34(4): 492–96. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3138/jvme.34.4.492
Quentin-Baxter M, Spencer J A and Rhind S M. 2005. Working in parallel, learning in parallel? Veterinary Record 157: 692– 95. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/vr.157.22.692
Rama Rao D, Agrawal R, Nanda S K, Awasthi I C, Joshi G P, Sanchita Bhattacharya and Indra Kumar D. 2011. Assessment of future human capital requirements in agriculture and allied sectors. NAIP Project Report, National Academy of Agricultural Research Management, Hyderabad, India, pp 54.
Viner B P and Jenner C S. 2005. Clinical audit – learning from the medical profession. Veterinary Record 157: 695–96. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/vr.157.22.695
World Health Organization.WHO. 2006. WHO global Salm-Surv. Progress report (2000–2005): building capacity for laboratory- based foodborne disease surveillance and outbreak detection and response. http://www.who.int/salmsurv/links/GSSProgressReport 2005.pdf.
Downloads
Submitted
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2017 The Indian Journal of Animal Sciences

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
The copyright of the articles published in The Indian Journal of Animal Sciences is vested with the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, which reserves the right to enter into any agreement with any organization in India or abroad, for reprography, photocopying, storage and dissemination of information. The Council has no objection to using the material, provided the information is not being utilized for commercial purposes and wherever the information is being used, proper credit is given to ICAR.