By
Keryn Bruister Page MISSISSIPPI
STATE --
Full
accreditation of the Mississippi Veterinary Research and
Diagnostic Laboratory System confirms the state's animals
receive the level of care they deserve. In
December, the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory
Diagnosticians granted full accreditation to the
four-laboratory system that includes labs in Jackson, Pearl,
Starkville and Stoneville. The AAVLD accreditation committee
conducted on-site inspections of the laboratories in
September. Dr.
Lanny Pace is executive director of the Mississippi
laboratory system and head of the pathobiology and
population medicine department at Mississippi State
University's College of Veterinary Medicine. "Prior
to last year's site visit, only the laboratory in Jackson
had been accredited. The other three labs had never
applied," Pace said. "Learning the lab system has received
the status of full accreditation for all species is big
news, making us one of only 38 accredited laboratories or
laboratory systems in the United States and
Canada." In
addition to being one of only a few states to have a
laboratory system accredited, Mississippi possibly contains
the only system to have an accredited fish laboratory --
located in the Thad Cochran National Warmwater Aquaculture
Center in Stoneville -- and one of a few to have an
accredited poultry lab -- the Poultry Research and
Diagnostic Laboratory in Pearl. Pace
said accreditation is important to diagnostic laboratory
systems because it ensures quality in the face of recent
media attention of food-borne diseases, newly emerging
diseases that have public health implications such as West
Nile Virus, and diseases that affect animal agriculture
markets such as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow
disease. "A lot
of Mississippi products go to foreign countries, so it's
important that our lab system is recognized as one that
follows internationally accepted standards for shipment of
animal products," Pace said. The
AAVLD accreditation process mandates laboratories operate in
a standardized fashion so that their results are
reliable. "For us
to be in that group of laboratories adds a lot of
credibility to what we are doing," said Dr. John Thomson,
dean of MSU's veterinary college. "It's a major milestone
for veterinary medicine in the state of Mississippi. Our
goal is to build a leading-edge diagnostic system that is
recognized nationally in poultry and fish disease
diagnostics. This can only happen with full
accreditation." To gain
AAVLD accreditation, a laboratory or laboratory system must
meet several requirements, including being administered by a
state department of agriculture, university, agricultural
experiment station, state department of health, or by
various combinations of such institutions. The lab director
must be a veterinarian, and professional staff should have
advanced training. Also
considered for the five-year accreditation are the
laboratory system's physical facilities, record-keeping
system, overall budget and necessary equipment. Accredited
diagnostic laboratory systems also are required to have a
documented quality assurance program to systematically
monitor and evaluate the quality of all services.
Released:
Jan. 29, 2004
Animal
Health
![]()
Veterinary lab
system gains
full accreditation
Contact: Dr. Lanny Pace, (601)
354-6089,
Dr.
John Thomson, (662) 325-1131
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:49
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm04/040129.html
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