Companion animal and equine clinical research: a Nordic perspective.

IF 1.9 2区 农林科学 Q2 VETERINARY SCIENCES Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica Pub Date : 2025-01-06 DOI:10.1186/s13028-024-00787-1
Bodil Ström Holst, Alejandro Engelmann, Gittan Gröndahl, Lotta Gunnarsson, Anita Haug Haaland, Anna Hielm-Björkman, Lars Moe, Marie Rhodin, Henrik Rönnberg, Marie Stråhle, Ylva Toljander, Annemarie Thuri Kristensen, Malin Hagberg Gustavsson
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Abstract

Background: The societal value of cats, dogs and horses is high, and the companion and sport animal health care sector is growing. Clinical research concerning cats, dogs and horses is crucial for the development of evidence-based medical care that benefits animals and their owners, and has implications for human and environmental health from a One Health perspective. Basic information on companion animal and equine research enables more directed measures to improve conditions for research within the area. The aim of the present study was to describe Nordic companion animal and equine clinical research from 2010 to 2019, including bibliometrics, human resources and funding.

Results: There were 2 042 published research publications originating from Nordic countries on cats (n = 282), dogs (n = 1 086), and horses (n = 781) from 2010 to 2019. The majority (83%) of the publications came from the four Nordic universities with veterinary programs. Seven percent of the publications were collaborations between two or more Nordic universities. Approximately 18% of the PhD theses (178 out of 970) from veterinary faculties or corresponding units concerned these species, most of them dogs (n = 86), followed by horses (n = 64), cats (n = 15) or a combination of these species (n = 13). The scientific areas cardiology, infectious diseases, reproduction, and surgery were prominent for all three species. A large proportion of grants were received from small- to medium-sized funding bodies, mainly funding running costs and only to a limited degree salaries. During 2010-2019, costs for veterinary and other services for cats and dogs steadily increased. The growth of the veterinary healthcare sector was not reflected in an increasing number of clinical research publications, for which no increase was seen after 2014.

Conclusions: Despite a high societal value of the species, veterinary clinical research on sports and companion animals has not increased, in contrast to the veterinary healthcare sector. Activities stimulating the research area, e.g. funding bodies enabling coverage of salaries, are needed. The development of Nordic veterinary clinical care may benefit from strengthened research cooperation between countries.

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伴侣动物和马临床研究:北欧视角。
背景:猫、狗和马的社会价值很高,伴侣和运动动物保健部门正在增长。关于猫、狗和马的临床研究对于发展循证医疗保健至关重要,这有利于动物及其主人,并从“同一个健康”的角度对人类和环境健康产生影响。关于伴侣动物和马研究的基本信息有助于采取更有针对性的措施,改善该地区的研究条件。本研究的目的是描述2010年至2019年北欧伴侣动物和马的临床研究,包括文献计量学、人力资源和资金。结果:2010 - 2019年,北欧国家共发表了2 042篇关于猫(n = 282)、狗(n = 1 086)和马(n = 781)的研究论文。大多数出版物(83%)来自四所拥有兽医专业的北欧大学。7%的出版物是两所或两所以上北欧大学之间的合作。大约18%的兽医学院或相应单位的博士论文(970篇中的178篇)涉及这些物种,其中大多数是狗(n = 86),其次是马(n = 64),猫(n = 15)或这些物种的组合(n = 13)。心脏病学、传染病、生殖和外科等科学领域对这三个物种都很重要。很大一部分赠款是从中小型供资机构收到的,主要用于资助运行费用,只用于有限程度的薪金。2010-2019年期间,猫和狗的兽医和其他服务费用稳步上升。兽医保健部门的增长并没有反映在临床研究出版物数量的增加上,2014年之后,临床研究出版物的数量没有增加。结论:尽管该物种具有很高的社会价值,但与兽医保健部门相比,对运动动物和伴侣动物的兽医临床研究并未增加。需要开展刺激研究领域的活动,例如资助机构能够支付薪金。北欧兽医临床护理的发展可以从加强国家间的研究合作中受益。
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来源期刊
Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica
Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica 农林科学-兽医学
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
28
审稿时长
18-36 weeks
期刊介绍: Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica is an open access journal encompassing all aspects of veterinary research and medicine of domestic and wild animals.
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