By
Keryn B. Page MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Humans are the obvious victims of natural and
manmade disasters, but animals are the primary concern for
veterinary specialists. Veterinarians
are needed to respond to floods, hurricanes, fires,
transportation accidents and other disasters that often
involve animals. Veterinarians also are trained in issues
such as food safety, diseases that can pass between humans
and animals, and environmental health concerns such as waste
and carcass disposal that also affect public
health. "As
animal care specialists, the faculty, staff and students at
the College of Veterinary Medicine are looked up to by the
community for animal care and welfare, especially in terms
of disaster response," said Dr. Carla Huston, a Mississippi
State University CVM assistant professor of
pathobiology/population medicine. "Any time you have a
disaster situation, if it affects animals, it likely will
affect humans as well. It's important for veterinarians to
know how to take care of animals in these
situations." During
a three-day Mississippi Animal Response Team Training
course, Huston and five other MSU representatives learned
about various disasters that can affect large animals, and
how to deal with those situations. Techniques for rescuing
cattle and horses from water, upturned trailers, ditches and
fiery barns were a few of the topics covered in the training
session. "Animal
care specialists were called in to help during the North
Carolina hurricanes a few years back and during last year's
California wildfires," Huston said. "Veterinarians
frequently face disaster situations in their careers, and it
is vital for them to know how to respond to emergencies
involving large animals." In
her own veterinary career, Huston said she has dealt with a
number of emergency situations involving large
animals. "I've
been involved with on-farm accidents where we had to hoist a
steer out of a culvert using a tractor, ropes and pulleys.
I've also had to help pull horses out of ditches after they
were struck by automobiles," Huston said. Huston,
who is involved with disaster response groups on the
national and state levels, has learned from her own
experiences the value of training veterinarians for the
unexpected. She said she is pleased with the enthusiasm of
CVM faculty, staff and students to take on this
often-overlooked role. Terri
Snead, veterinary technician in MSU's production medicine
department, said living and working in a rural state makes
large animal emergency rescue skills particularly
useful. "It
was a good exercise in understanding the benefits of a team.
For instance, on a rescue scene, I can't imagine myself
hooking up pulleys, working the jaws of life, tying
complicated rescue knots or working the front-end loader,"
Snead explained. "I
can imagine monitoring the condition of the horse, giving an
educated opinion on how the horse might react to a loud
machine or telling the rescue personnel, 'Hey, as soon as
this horse feels like he may be free, he's going to try to
get up, so be ready to move out of the way,'" she
added. In
addition to MSU veterinary specialists, participants in the
July training session in Canton also included animal control
personnel, fire fighters, emergency medical technicians,
sheriffs and other rescue personnel. Snead said she was
pleased with the variety of professions represented.
"It
was awesome to see firemen and other rescue personnel there.
They had a great knowledge of rescue techniques, but really
wanted to become proficient in handling animals, especially
horses, in stressful situations," she said. One
piece of useful information for Snead came during what she
called the "mud training." Because cattle and horses tend to
congregate in areas that become very muddy, such as around a
water trough or hay feeder, it is not unusual to hear
stories of animals getting stuck there. "When
you pull something out of the mud, the pull of the suction
of the mud is greater than the force that you are using to
pull. However, using an air compressor with the hose hooked
up to PVC pipe that you put down in the mud next to the
victim, you can break that suction and allow the animal to
be more easily pulled out," Snead explained. Janie
Kelley is a second-year CVM student who has a particular
interest in large animal disaster response. Kelley is in the
process of forming a student disaster response organization
that will focus on issues relevant to this area of
veterinary medicine. "Right
now my plan involves distributing lists of emergency contact
phone numbers to fire departments and animal rescue centers.
When an emergency arises involving an animal, they will have
those numbers on hand so they can call someone who can help
with the animal," Kelley said. "These people already may be
able to take care of the humans, but what do they do with
the animals?" Kelley,
who is considering the dual-degree program offered to MSU
veterinary students, is interested in pursuing a future
career dealing with bioterrorism/biosecurity and foreign
animal disease. She plans to attend a second training
session that will also deal with small animal
rescue. The
training was sponsored by the Mississippi Board of Animal
Health. MSU was well-represented there, accounting for five
of the 30 participants. Attending were Snead; Kelley;
Huston; Huston's husband John, a Mississippi Agricultural
and Forestry Experiment Station researcher; CVM graduate
student and lab animal veterinarian Dr. Dawn Tucker; and
veterinary student Jim Whitehead. Released:
Aug. 19, 2004
Animal
Health
![]()
MSU veterinary
specialists gain
disaster response skills
Contact: Dr. Carla Huston, (662) 325-1183
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:42
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm04/040819.html
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