Animal welfare set
to become key part of China’s vet training
Animals Asia has
welcomed the news that animal welfare looks set to become a key part of China’s
veterinary curriculum.
The Chinese
Veterinary Medicine Association (CVMA) is working with the Ministry of
Education on plans to integrate animal welfare as a compulsory examinable
subject in its national examinations. The move has been applauded by China’s
animal welfare advocates and activists and is being seen as part of a wider
movement within the country to recognise the needs of animals.
While animal welfare
is already taught at many veterinary universities, new plans will see it become
institutionalised as a compulsory aspect of the national syllabus. The move
will require the training of teaching staff and the production of textbooks on
the issue, with materials and expertise on the topic currently in scarce
supply.
Pivotal in the
preparatory process will be experts like Professor Fei Rong Mei.
Recently named one
of the top 10 vets in China by the CVMA for her contribution to animal welfare,
Professor Fei Rong Mei is also a World Organisation for Animal Health
representative and animal welfare lecturer at the Nanjing Agricultural
University.
In 2013, Prof Fei
worked with Animals Asia and the Jeanne Marchig International Centre for Animal
Welfare Education on an animal welfare and veterinary skills teaching symposium
in Nanjing, where she helped update the training of more than 20 teachers from
around the country. In the 10 years she’s dedicated to teaching and research on
animal welfare and veterinary work, this “super-vet” has pushed animal welfare
curriculum training, helped produce the country’s best textbooks on the subject
and played a pivotal role in preparing the ground for the upcoming
developments.
Animals Asia Animal Welfare Director Dave
Neale said:
“It’s the right time
for China to make animal welfare an examinable and compulsory subject for vets.
The groundwork laid by dedicated professionals like Professor Fei Rong Mei
in-country, has done so much to increase well-being and reduce suffering of animals
and we very much look forward to supporting Professor Fei and her colleagues in
any way we can as they make this important next step.
“Vets dedicate their
lives to animals. If we can ensure animal welfare is part of their training
then not only can they better treat animals, they can also continue to share
the message of respect for animals day-in-day-out right across China on a
massive scale.”
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