The Guardian (Nigeria)

Veterinary Doctors Renew Drive To Tackle Quackery

- By Gbenga Akinfenwa

VETERINARY­experts have expressed renewed drive to tackle the challenge of quackery bedeviling the industry, describing it as an albatross that has caused financial losses and integrity damage to the profession.

While speaking at an event to mark this year’s World Veterinary Day with the theme, with the theme, “Strengthen­ing Veterinary Resilience,” in Ikeja, Lagos State, the chairman of the state chapter of the Nigerian Veterinary Medical Associatio­n ( NVMA), Dr. Olufemi Aroso, said that the activities of non- profession­als who engage in impersonat­ing veterinari­ans have become a threat to the practice.

“We are already addressing quackery in several ways, one is the premise registrati­on of practition­ers. The other way is the introducti­on of harmonised identity card for veterinari­ans, which will have security codes to show the practition­er’s practicing number, name, state, institutio­n, and others.

The President of the Small Animal Veterinary Associatio­n of Nigeria ( SAVAN), Dr. Kunle Abiade, who described quackery as a serious albatross, said some people are fond of pretending to be what they are not, impersonat­ing veterinari­ans and in the process damaging the integrity of the profession.

“They pretend to be veterinari­ans, causing economic losses to clients. To us as practition­ers, this is a very bad issue because it destroys the image of the profession, and casts aspersions on our integrity. It has been causing a lot of damage, and a lot of integrity loss to our profession, and to animal owners, and we think it should stop,” Abiade who doubles as the CEO of Petcare Animal Hospital said.

“We are advising pet owners to always seek clarificat­ions before engaging the services of vet doctors. Nigerians should be more enlightene­d to seek quality services,” he added.

On his part, the Director of Veterinary Services, Ministry of Agricultur­e, Lagos State, Dr. Rasheed Molade Macaulay, said that in line with the theme, veterinari­ans have successful­ly surmounted challenges in the practice due to their training, which is hinged on endurance.

Macaulay said: “One of the challenges facing this profession is quackery. Currently, all farmers are vets; they treat their livestock, especially poultry, without seeking profession­al advice. It is when the problem has gone out of hand that they turn vet doctors into magicians and that’s what is called resilience while winning them over.”

He noted that the rising cases of animal diseases are not mainly caused by climate change as postulated in many quarters, but mainly through the mobility of people and the closeness of animals to humans.

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