What is the International Veterinary Academy of Pain Management (IVAPM),
and what is its vision?
What is the current status of the IVAPM?
What role do you envision the Academy playing in veterinary medicine?
Will the Academy be inclusive or exclusive?
Who are the Academy's target audiences?
Will the Academy be a certifying group?
What are the benefits and value of membership?
What variety of animal species will the Academy represent?
Why should I be interested in the International Veterinary Academy
of Pain Management?
What is the International Veterinary Academy of Pain Management (apd), and what is its vision?
The Mission Statement of the IVAPM best articulates a description of the organization as well as its vision at this time:
"The International Veterinary Academy of Pain Management is a multi-disciplinary
organization that seeks to promote the acquisition and dissemination
of cross-species knowledge related to the biology and clinical treatment
of pain in animals. Stakeholders in this process include a wide cross-section
of individuals. The Academy seeks to: provide forums for communication
among all interested parties of knowledge concerning the biology and
treatment of animal pain, provide continuing education in the area
of pain recognition and treatment, and establish a process whereby
veterinarians with a special interest in the area of animal pain management
can meet a set of prescribed objectives that will ultimately lead to
certification as a specialist in the management of animal pain. Finally,
the Academy seeks to promote humane, scientific investigation into
the biology of animal pain and the assessment of the efficacy of defined
treatment modalities."
The makeup of the organization as articulated in the mission statement
emphasizes the diversity of the stakeholders, including veterinarians,
research scientists, veterinary nurses, veterinary industry partners,
and allied professionals. This purposefully broad "casting of the net" identifies
the many arenas within which animal pain is relevant and must be addressed in
more meaningful ways than presently.
What is the current status of the IVAPM?
The current status of the program is one of infancy -
- a loose amalgam of individuals from many different disciplines including
but not limited to: anaesthesiology, surgery, private veterinary practice,
veterinary practice consultants, industry, lab animal medicine, and
academic practitioners. We currently rely on an electronic list-serve
administered at Cornell University for communication among participants.
There are subsets of the larger list of participants who comprise the
necessary committees and are working on various fundamental aspects
of the IVAPM.
What role do you envision the Academy playing in veterinary medicine?
The IVAPM will serve to articulate specific standards of care in the
arena of animal pain management. This will be a dynamic role with ongoing
activity, as new information becomes available. Furthermore, the IVAPM
will take a proactive role in coordinating and disseminating information
and research results. Ultimately, it may be appropriate for the IVAPM
to take an active role in guiding new research in relevant areas.he
apd will serve to articulate specific standards of care in the arena
of animal pain management. This will be a dynamic role with ongoing activity,
as new information becomes available. Furthermore, the apd will take
a proactive role in coordinating and disseminating information and research
results. Ultimately, it may be appropriate for the apd to take an
active role in guiding new research in relevant areas.
Will the Academy
be inclusive or exclusive?
The IVAPM is definitely an inclusive organization.
As the organization matures, there may develop branches or subsets
within the IVAPM to accommodate the different needs of various constituencies.
For instance, there will eventually be standards that must be met
in order to achieve certification in the specialty of animal pain management
- - ideally for veterinarians as well as for other stakeholders
like veterinary nurses.
Who are the Academy's
target audiences?
Primary care veterinarians and their veterinary nurses will prove to
be a critical component of Academy membership. Other targets include
scientific researchers in the area of animal pain management as well
as participants in laboratory animal medicine, for example. In short,
anyone involved in animal care with an interest in pain management are
encouraged to join and participate.
Will the Academy be a certifying group?
Ultimately, the IVAPM will be a certifying body.
Due to the practical, clinical focus of the IVAPM, certification will
most likely resemble that of the American Board of Veterinary Practitioners.
There is also the opportunity for variable levels of certification
depending upon the credentials of the individual. A committee is currently
working on the specifics of certification, with the ultimate goal of
having the first certification exam in 2006.
What are the benefits and
value of membership?
Some of the benefits and values of membership
and participation in the IVAPM include:
- Participation in excellence
in animal care.
- Establishing and raising standards of care in
the arena of pain management.
- Ethical and practical debate
with people from a variety of backgrounds on the subject of animal
pain and its management
- Access to information/research/data that reflects
the most updated recommendations.
What variety of animal species
will the Academy represent?
The actual variety of animal species
served by the apd will ultimately be driven by the membership. Obvious
examples of appropriate species include but are not limited to:
- Dogs
- Cats
- Laboratory animals
- Horses
- Food animals
- Exotic species
- Birds
Why should I be interested in the
International Veterinary Academy of Pain Management?
You are well aware
of society's increased concern for the ethical and compassionate
care of humans and animals suffering from pain and distress. In veterinary
medicine, research findings and clinical experience are rapidly expanding our
understanding of pain in animals. Through a variety of educational modalities,
veterinarians have the opportunity to improve their understanding of pain,
and to incorporate this new found knowledge into their day to day practice.
The goal of the IVAPM is to facilitate this process. Cutting-edge practitioners
are already changing the face of veterinary medicine with an ethic that includes
the consideration and treatment of pain in every patient. This ethic recognizes
that treating pain is a fundamental part of practicing good medicine. The paradigm
with respect to pain in animals has already begun to shift. This group needs
to be on the forefront of this change. |