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Bennett Justin C.. Veterinarian Workforce Role in Defense Against Animal Disease. Nova Science Publishers,2010. — 130 p.. 2010

Efforts to identify the veterinarian workforce needed for a catastrophic event are insufficient.Specifically, agencies' plans lack important elements necessary for continuing essential veterinarian functions during a pandemic, such as identifying which functions must be performed on-site and how they will be carried out if absenteeism reaches 40 percent—the rate predicted at the height of the pandemic and used for planning purposes. In addition, one federal effort to prepare for the intentional introduction of a foreign animal disease is based on the unrealistic assumption that all affected animals will be slaughtered, as the United States has done for smaller outbreaks, making the resulting veterinarian workforce estimates irrelevant. A second effort lacks crucial data, including data on how the disease would spread in wildlife. If wildlife became infected, as they have in the past, response would be greatly complicated and could require more veterinarians and different expertise.

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Chapter 3 The Federal Government Lacks a Comprehensive Understanding of the Sufficiency of Its Veterinarian Workforce
Chapter 4 Efforts to Identify the Veterinarian Workforce Needed during a Pandemic and Large-Scale Animal Disease Outbreak Are Insufficient
Chapter 5 Federal and State Agencies Are Missing Important Opportunities to Ensure Efficient use of Veterinarians during Disease Outbreaks
More medical literature on Medic.Studio

Books and textbooks on the discipline Veterinary medicine:

  1. Barger A.M., MacNeill A.L. (Eds.). Small Animal Cytologic Diagnosis: Canine and Feline Disease. CRC Press,2024. — 536 p. - 2024 ãîä
  2. Behr Marcel A., Stevenson K., Kapur V. (eds.). Paratuberculosis: Organism, Disease, Control. 2nd edition. — CAB International,2020. — 439 p. - 2020 ãîä
  3. Dibaba A.B., Kriek N.P.J., Thoen C.O. (eds.). Tuberculosis in Animals: An African Perspective. Springer,2019. — 453 p. - 2019 ãîä
  4. Barthold Stephen W., Griffey Stephen M., Percy Dean H.. Pathology of Laboratory Rodents and Rabbits. 4th Edition. — Wiley-Blackwell,2016. — 384 p. - 2016 ãîä
  5. Colville Thomas, Bassert Joanna M.. Clinical Anatomy and Physiology for Veterinary Technicians. 3rd edition. — Elsevier,2016. — 658 p. - 2016 ãîä
  6. Botzler Richard G., Brown Richard N.. Foundations of Wildlife Diseases. University of California Press,2014. — 458 p. - 2014 ãîä
  7. Akers R. Michael, Denbow D. Michael. Anatomy and Physiology of Domestic Animals. 2nd edition. — Wiley-Blackwell,2013. — 685 p. - 2013 ãîä
  8. Gavier-Widen D., Meredith A., Duff Paul J. (eds.). Infectious Diseases of Wild Mammals and Birds in Europe. London: Wiley-Blackwell,2012. — 568 p. - 2012 ãîä
  9. Chandler M.. Small animal gastroenterology. Saunders,2011. — 588 p. - 2011 ãîä
  10. Cohran P.E.. Veterinary Anatomy and Physiology. 2 edition. Delmar,2011. - 421 p. - 2011 ãîä
  11. Gotthelf Louis N.. Small Animal Ear Diseases: An Illustrated Guide. 2nd ed. — Saunders,2004. — 384 p. - 2004 ãîä
  12. Aspinall V., Capello M.. Introduction to Veterinary Anatomy and Physiology. Elsevier - Health Sciences Division,2004. — 252 p. - 2004 ãîä
  13. Blowey R.W.. A Veterinary Book for Dairy Farmers. 3rd Edition. — Old Pond Publishing,1999. — 480 p. - 1999 ãîä