By
Keryn Bruister Page MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Instead of the typical veterinary internship, one
Mississippi State University student joined a human
influenza response team during the severe 2003-04 flu
season. Dr.
Brittany Baughman originally planned to work with the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention studying diseases
that are zoonotic, or pass between humans and animals. But
when the unusually severe flu season hit, that branch of the
CDC needed extra help with an in-depth study of influenza
deaths in children. "This
experience was very valuable to me because you learn more
participating in a real situation than a hypothetical one,"
said Baughman, a dual-degree master's student majoring in
wildlife population medicine at MSU's College of Veterinary
Medicine. The
26-year-old veterinarian received her bachelor's degree from
MSU in animal and dairy science in 2000 and a doctorate in
veterinary medicine in May 2003. She expects to receive her
master's in veterinary medicine this year. Although
her work with the CDC, located in Atlanta, involved human
disease, Baughman said the experience was applicable to her
future career in wildlife epidemiology. "Wildlife
medicine involves studying diseases in populations of
wildlife," Baughman explained. "During my internship, I was
studying a disease in populations -- it just happened to be
human populations." Baughman
coordinated the influenza response team's hotline and e-mail
response systems, served as the point of first contact for
medical professionals, and fielded questions from doctors
and the public. She also established a unified system to
track more than 200 cases and independently investigated
nine cases in South Carolina and Maryland. "Brittany
assisted the team in responding to a Congressional request
to confirm death cases with states," wrote CDC medical
epidemiologist Dr. David K. Shay in a letter to Baughman's
adviser, Dr. S.W. Jack. This information was published in
the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. "By
improving team efficiency, she also helped the team better
prepare to present findings to the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices at its February 2004 meeting," Shay
continued. "Information learned from this investigation is
expected to help guide future (advisory committee) pediatric
influenza immunization recommendations." The
9-year-old dual-degree program at MSU's veterinary college
allows students to earn a doctorate in veterinary medicine,
as well as a master's degree in a chosen field. The first
two-and-a-half years are the same for all veterinary
students. But during the spring of their third year,
dual-degree students begin taking graduate
courses. "The
flexibility in our third and fourth years allows students to
focus their studies," said Jack, who is a professor in the
pathobiology and population medicine department and
coordinator for the program. "Most students take externships
or advanced studies; dual-degree students take graduate
courses." During
their fifth year of study, dual-degree students complete a
series of three- to six-week internships with various
agencies. "It
takes a pretty sizable commitment for a student to stay in
school an extra year," Jack said. "These students
effectively go to school straight through from the fall of
their sophomore year for the next four years. They don't
have summer breaks." Now in
her fifth year, the Cleveland native has worked with
veterinarians across the country on various disease
outbreaks. Baughman worked with U.S. Department of
Agriculture veterinarians in Southern California on the
Exotic Newcastle Disease outbreak in poultry. She also
completed an internship with the Southeastern Cooperative
Wildlife Disease Study in Athens, Ga., and traveled to
Laramie, Wyo., to work with Wyoming State Veterinary
Diagnostic Laboratory veterinarians on Chronic Wasting
Disease of deer and elk. After
her three-week stint with the CDC in Atlanta, Baughman spent
three weeks in Maine studying cases of colitis, an infection
that can be contracted by hospital patients. Released:
Feb. 26, 2004
Animal
Health
![]()
Veterinary
student assists during human flu outbreak
Contact: Dr. S.W. Jack, (662) 325-1311
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:49
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm04/040226.html
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