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Research Summit Addresses Need for Increased Funding for Equine Projects

by By Sally J. Baker | Jun 29, 2006, 12:25 PM

How to increase funding for equine research was the primary focus of a collaborative equine research summit held in Lexington, KY, April 19-20. Hosted by the American Association of Equine Practitioners (AAEP) Foundation, Inc., over 35 leading researchers, industry leaders and funding agencies gathered to develop a blueprint for future success in the equine research field.

While the amount of money dedicated to equine research by the racing industry, private foundations, universities and individual donors has increased in recent years, it is expected that future advances in equine medicine will be more costly and will require more funding than is currently available.

“Greater advances will require greater funding,” explained Nat White II, DVM, Dipl. ACVS, Chairman of the AAEP Foundation Advisory Committee and the Jean Ellen Shehan Professor and Director of the Marion duPont Scott Equine Medical Center at the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine. “The treatment of Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro’s life-threatening injury exemplifies the state-of-the-art advances that have taken equine medicine to a new level. Future breakthroughs will continue to be technologically driven and will require the funding of state-of-the-art laboratories, to be run by sophisticated investigators,” he said.

To meet this funding goal, summit participants recommended a horse owner education and fundraising campaign about the benefits of equine research. An audit of other potential funding sources also will be conducted.

In tandem with the need for increased research funding is the concern that there are not enough researchers to conduct future equine research projects. Attendees recommended increasing stipends for graduate students conducting research, and encouraged funding agencies to include the cost of graduate fellowships in their budgets. To attract more researchers to equine science, recruitment of these individuals should start in veterinary school.

An additional priority identified at the summit was the need for an equine disease database that will allow for disease tracking and investigation on a national scale. To make this a reality, a subcommittee of summit participants will investigate how the practice management systems used in private equine practice could have integrated software to consistently record key information about disease developments.

Recommendations by the summit attendees will be addressed at the July meeting of the AAEP Foundation in Indianapolis, IN. In addition to the AAEP Foundation, other supporting sponsors of the Summit were the American Live Stock Insurance Company, the American Quarter Horse Association Foundation, Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation, the Havemeyer Foundation and the Morris Animal Foundation.

A complete report of the meeting’s outcomes and directives is available on www.aaepfoundation.org. For more information about the summit, contact Amelia Geran, AAEP Foundation Development Coordinator, at (859) 233-0147 or [email protected].


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