Home News Issues My AVMA Jobs Animal Health Public Health @Work Blog Newsletters
Search Tips | Advanced Search     Bookmark and Share
  
Search News
Search within News only.

2011 Convention News
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
Search by Headline Listing
JAVMA News Express archive
JAVMA News Photo Galleries

Biosecurity
 
Public Health

AVMA Member area = AVMA/SAVMA  Members Only


Get Adobe reader

Some files on this page require Adobe Reader software. Click on the image above to download it for free from the Adobe site.

 

JAVMA News
AVMA News

June 1, 2010
posted May 19, 2010
 

EXECUTIVE BOARD COVERAGE


Sports medicine and rehab specialty recognized


Printer-friendly version

The Executive Board has granted the American College of Veterinary Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation provisional recognition as a veterinary specialty organization.

The AVMA Council on Education recommended the board's formal recognition of the organization, a move also supported by the American Board of Veterinary Specialties.

The American College of Veterinary Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation had its beginnings in 2003, when the group's organizing committee first submitted a letter of intent to the ABVS to organize as a veterinary specialty organization.

In recent years, pet rehabilitation has become less of a niche service and more of a mainstream treatment option within veterinary medicine.

The ACVSMR organizing committee is currently made up of 27 charter diplomates, according to Dr. Hilary M. Clayton, the McPhail Dressage Chair in Equine Sports Medicine at the Michigan State University College of Veterinary Medicine. Given the growing demand for pet rehabilitation, she expects membership will reach 400 in the next few years.

Dr. Clayton, a committee member herself, said the group is eager to move ahead with the organization and implementation of the new specialty. There will be two categories within the college: Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation (canine) and Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation (equine).

"I believe that recognition of ACVSMR will benefit veterinary rehabilitative medicine not only by certifying specialists but also by raising awareness of the value of the physiotherapeutic approach and by stimulating evidence-based research that will provide a framework for effective veterinary rehabilitation protocols," Dr. Clayton said.

The ABVS currently recognizes a total of 21 specialty organizations.

Return to top