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The Clinical Scholar Programme

The Clinical Scholar Programme

Professor Josh Slater BVM&S PhD DipECEIM MRCVS, European Specialist in Equine Medicine, Professor of Equine Clinical Studies, Royal Veterinary College

Wouldn't it be wonderful if there were an initiative that had long-lasting welfare benefits, benefits that continued long after the funding had stopped and which continued to spread like ripples across the surface of a pond?

The clinical scholar programme does exactly this and I am going to spend the next few minutes explaining how the programme works. I'll finish with the story of one particular scholar, our first scholar in fact, that shows precisely how the programme represents excellent investment in equine welfare.

Clinical scholarships are one of the Trust’s three welfare funding initiatives: all are interdependent and benefit from each other. Scholarships fund people and provide advanced clinical and research training for talented young veterinarians.

Typically, scholars have between two and four years of post-graduate clinical experience in equine practice or an internship in a specialist facility followed by equine practice. The scholarships are very popular ­ and hence highly competitive ­ which means that it is the cream of our young equine vets who are selected to become scholars. You will see later from the achievements of the Trust's scholars that this rigorous selection really has, and continues to, pay dividends for equine welfare.

The interdependent nature of the three initiatives is a key ingredient: buildings provide clinical facilities in which scholars are trained and the scholars contribute to welfare research projects.

Scholarships fund three-year structured training programmes in a specific clinical discipline ­ for example medicine, surgery or anaesthesia ­ in elite centres with internationally recognised experts as training supervisors.

Training is focussed on cutting-edge clinical practice, especially diagnostic and treatment techniques, with scholars given increasing responsibility as they gain experience and confidence. Around one-third of the scholarship is spent on a welfare-related research project ­ in some cases integrated into one of the Trust’s welfare research grants ­ where scholars gain experience not just in research but in a range of transferable scientific skills.

Why is all this a good thing? The scholars become the next generation of clinical experts - the equivalent of consultants in the NHS - and gain recognition by achieving a specialist postgraduate clinical Diploma.

So why is the clinical scholar programme good for equine welfare? By investing in people who become equine specialists, the programme has long-lasting welfare benefits: the scholars go on to set standards, become opinion leaders, improve the knowledge and skills of others through education and conduct welfare related clinical and basic science research.

The programme began in 1983. Since then 36 scholarships have been funded and 26 scholars have completed programmes in a wide range of clinical disciplines: surgery, medicine, anaesthesia, epidemiology, diagnostic imaging and pathology. Scholarship programmes have run in the UK veterinary schools and the Animal Health Trust and five have run as partnerships between veterinary schools and elite equine practices.

The value of scholarships is immediately apparent when we look at what the scholars who have completed programmes are doing now: they are providing clinical expertise in veterinary schools, referral practice and general practice; some have gone onto further research training. They are working around the world in the UK, Europe, the Middle East and Australia and you will see their

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The Trust is a member of the National Equine Welfare CouncilRegistered Charity Number 231748