Abstract

This rotation provides students with the opportunity to develop skills in advanced veterinary practice and awareness of the economic drivers of animal production industries or clinical practice relevant to the rotation elective selected. Students may elect to complete a rotation placement with the Fred Morley Unit or external agency working … For more content click the Read More button below.

Syllabus

This subject will cover the following topics: Veterinary medicine;Pharmacology;Epidemiology;Economics and financial management;Animal nutrition;Animal production;Animal behaviour;Animal welfare;Veterinary legislation; andGenetics.

Learning outcomes

Upon successful completion of this subject, students should:
1.
describe the role of veterinarians in providing economic advice to producers or animal owners in the context in which the placement was conducted;
2.
conduct a preliminary investigation into the health, welfare, productivity, bio-security and/or product quality (including food safety) of animals presented to the enterprise in which the placement is completed;
3.
identify the major issues affecting the present and future production, security and profitability of producers in the relevant industry, or create a problem list for animals presented for advanced care and demonstrate advanced skills in examination, diagnosis, clinical reasoning and treatment or patient care appropriate to the placement;
4.
prepare advice for producers or owners in the relevant context which reflect a deep understanding of veterinary epidemiology, animal welfare, economics, genetics, nutrition, clinical practice disease control principles, and which show integration of best available clinical and research evidence with financial realities of practice or production; and
5.
meet the Learning Outcomes described in the relevant clinical rotation at an advanced level (if repeating clinical rotation 1, 2 or 3); or demonstrate an understanding of economic drivers of animal production systems associated with management, regulatory, climatic or commercial environment.

Enrolment restrictions

Only available to students enrolled in the:
Bachelor of Veterinary Science, 
Bachelor of Veterinary Biology, 
Bachelor of Veterinary Biology (Honours), and
Bachelor of Veterinary Science (Honours)

Not available to students who have successfully completed VSC465.

Work integrated learning

Placement Duration 120 hours Details Student must attend a Livestock Industry service provider or repeat Clinical Rotation 1, 2 or 3 for this rotation. 15 days (approx 120hrs)

Learning resources

Additional resources required by students

Students attending compulsory work integrated learning will incur costs associated with travel, accommodation and required resources.