For the last four days I’ve been at the
NAVC
(North American Veterinary Community) conference
in Orlando.
Many of you are likely
thinking “oh that lucky girl!” but the truth is, aside from dinners at night
and taking a bus back and forth between venues I didn’t get outside much to
enjoy the Florida weather.
I also didn’t
get to enjoy the Florida weather because it’s January, which is an
unpredictable time of year and while there was no snow and the temperatures
were above freezing, it wasn't really that warm....
What I like most about attending conferences it getting the
opportunity to learn something new and with over 1200 sessions to chose from,
learning something new was not that difficult!
There was one session I wanted to attend but did not get the
chance. It was titled “Zoobiquity: Bringing Human
Science to Animal Science”. The session promised to enlighten us on how
a cardiologist whose experience in helping to treat a monkey led to a journey
of discovering what animals can teach us about the human body and mind and how
species-spanning commonalities do exist! This journey ultimately inspired the
New York Times bestselling book, Zoobiquity:
The Astonishing Connection Between Human and Animal Health.
As I’ve come to learn, Zoobiquity is based on a common idea
that humans and animals get the same diseases and explores how animal and human
commonality can be used to diagnose, treat, and heal patients of all species. Of course, to do so we need to
collaborate. We need to tap into and
access the vast information and experience of veterinarians and wildlife
biologists.
Certainly the concept of One Health is not new
and I’ve spoken about it in previous
blogs. I think most would agree that
there is a strong connection between people, animals and the planet. However, our focus on One Health is driven
more by contemplating infectious diseases and zoonoses. Because Zoobiquity
utilizes comparative medicine, it broadens the emphasis to include many other
areas of human and animal medicine and looks for linkages with clinical
implications for patients both human and animal.
The book itself was inspired by an eye-opening consultation
at the Los Angeles Zoo, which revealed that a monkey experienced the same
symptoms of heart failure as human patients.
This resulted in cardiologist Barbara Natterson-Horowitz embarking upon
a project that would reshape how she practiced medicine. She began informally
researching every affliction that she encountered in humans to learn whether it
also happened with animals and found that it usually did. She found that dinosaurs suffered from brain
cancer, koalas can catch chlamydia, reindeer seek narcotic escape in
hallucinogenic mushrooms, stallions self-mutilate, and gorillas experience
clinical depression.
Having missed the talk, I have read the first
Chapter of the book and without a doubt will be running out to buy it! I also look forward to my next conference – you’re
never too old to learn something new and exciting, you just have to open your
mind to the possibilities!
Bugging Off!
Nicole