Program

Academic activities – EAE – One Health, One World
Day Hour Topic
11/06 08:30 to 09:30 Opening session and beginning of activities
One Health
Prof. Guy Palmer, WSU (webconference)
09:30 to 11:30 A holistic approach for One Health: human, animal, environment
Prof. Marguerite Pappaioanou, UW
14:30 to 17:00 Study groups
Supervision: Prof. Christina Pettan-Brewer, UW
11/07 08:30 to 11:30 Antimicrobial resistance global impacts
Prof. Eric T. Lofgren, WSU
14:30 to 17:00 Study groups
Supervision: Prof. Luís Augusto Nero, DVT, UFV
11/08 08:30 to 11:30 Economic burden of foodborne and zoonotic diseases
Sandra Hoffmann, PhD, USDA (webconference)
14:30 to 17:00 Study groups
Supervision: Prof. Luís Augusto Nero, DVT, UFV
11/09 08:30 to 11:30 Animal models for human diseases
Prof. Min Du, WSU
14:30 to 17:00 Study groups
Supervision: Prof. Simone Eliza Facioni Guimarães, DZO, UFV
11/10 08:30 to 11:30 Natural animal diseases as models for human diseases
Prof. Mike Henson, UMN
Prof. Jessica Snyder, UW
14:30 to 15:30 Ethics in animal use in research
Prof. Bernard Rollin, CSU (apresentação por webconferência)
15:30 to 17:00 Study groups
Supervision: Prof. Emily Correna Carlo Reis, DVT, UFV
11/11 Study groups
11/12 Study groups
11/13 08:30 to 11:30 Group discussions and presentations
14:30 to 17:00 Group discussions and presentations
11/14 08:30 to 11:30 Group discussions and presentations
14:30 to 17:00 Closing session and evaluation of EAE activities

 

Invited professor and their topics

 

1) An holistic approach for One Health: human, animal, environment

Professors Guy Palmer and Marguerite Pappaioanou

  •  Historical development and current challenges on One Health.
  • One Health as a driver to achieve the Sustainability Development Goals.
  • Determinants of pathogen strain structure and emergence.

 

2) Ethics in animal use in research

Professor Bernard E. Rollin

  • The denial of ethics and consciousness in science – scientific ideology
  • The ethical issues occasioned by animal research – How those issues are beginning to be resolved
  • Convincing US veterinary medicine to incorporate analgesia for animals.

 

3) Animal models for human diseases

Professor Min Du

  • Rodents, cattle and sheep for studying the impact of maternal nutrition on fetal development and offspring health: fat and muscle development
  • Mechanisms for regulating progenitor cell differentiation
  • Fat tissue and muscle development in beef cattle and sheep

 

4) Naturally-occuring animal models of human diseases

Professors Mike Henson and Jessica Snyder

  • Pros and cons of canine and feline animal models of human diseases
  • Anatomic and genetic similarities in the pathogenesis of animal and human diseases
  • Examples of useful naturally-occurring animal models of human diseases
  • Designing clinical trials in animals with application to human drug development pathway
  • Canine models of inherited muscular disease for clinical translation.
  • Rodent models of aging

 

5) Economic burden of foodborne and zoonotic diseases

Dr. Sandra Hoffmann

  • Theoretical foundations for valuation of the economic burden of disease
  • Methods used to value the economic burden of disease
  • Non-monetary burden of disease estimate
  • An overview of health valuation practice by governments around the world and application to foodborne disease
  • Frontier issues for research

 

 6) Antimicrobial resistance global impacts.

Professor Eric T. Lofgren

  • An introduction to the global burden of antimicrobial resistance
  • Global Interconnectedness
  • Local Interconnectedness
  • Controlling Antimicrobial Resistance on the Farm and in the Hospital
  • Research Methods

 

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