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Vets fill in gaps with CD prescription from pharmaceutical firm

Published on
February 13, 1998
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Veterinary students are to have their education supplemented with recorded lectures on multimedia CD-Roms. The initiative is sponsored by the Cambridge-based pharmaceutical company Intervet UK and led by Mark Holmes of Cambridge Veterinary School.

Dr Holmes conceived the idea in response to funding shortages in veterinary education and a scarcity of specialist lecturers.

The first two titles were launched this week and will go out to all final-year students at Britain's veterinary colleges. The software reproduces traditional lectures authentically by playing audio and video footage of lecturers, preserving their gesticulations, with synchronised slideshows and a scrolling transcript.

David Sutton, head of veterinary services at Intervet UK, said: "We are frequently asked to give lectures, particularly on topics such as poultry, for which there are a shortage of lecturers. We do our best, but sometimes, like universities, we just don't have sufficient staff resources."

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Intervet plans to follow up its first two CD-Roms on cardiology and sheep abortion by releasing two new titles a year.

Iain McCormick of the Association of Veterinary Students welcomed the system. "It fills the gaps really well; especially for the subjects they've chosen, because they involve a lot of overhead projections," he said.

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"The chance to be able to run over them again and really make best use of them is a great idea. The software seems very user friendly, too."

Mark Johnston, a practising vet, pointed out the usefulness of Intervet's sheep abortion CD-Rom as a recap for qualified vets, unable to attend regular lectures.

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