Postgraduate
Livestock Health and Production
(MSC, Postgraduate Diploma and Postgraduate Certificate)
Academic Staff
The academic team
responsible for marking both examination papers and tutor marked
assignments include:
Christine
Thuranira-McKeever
Distance Learning Programme Director
Christine graduated from the University of Kent in Canterbury and
went on to read for a Masters degree in Development Economics at the
University of Manchester, in 1995. She moved to the International
Livestock Research Institute in Nairobi and Addis Ababa, and worked
there for a number of years before leaving to undertake a PhD at the
University of Edinburgh's Centre for Tropical Veterinary Medicine.
Her research focused on the costs of livestock disease to small
holder farmers in developing countries and the socio-economic
factors influencing smallholders' ability to productively keep
livestock. After completing her PhD, Christine worked as a research
associate for a DFID-funded Animal Health Programme, based at the
University of Edinburgh. This was a competitive grants programme
that funded research into animal health issues in the developing
world. During her time in Edinburgh University, Christine was also
involved in teaching undergraduate students. Her research interests
remain in the field of international development, mainly from a
livestock and agriculture perspective. Christine was appointed to
her current post in July 2008.
Brian
Aldridge
Professor of Production Animal Medicine
Brian graduated with a BVSc from the
University of Liverpool in July 1984. After graduating he completed
an MS at Colorado State University and then enrolled in a PhD
programme in the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Two successive
Post-doctoral appointments followed in 1993 in the Department of
Animal Health and Biomedical Sciences, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, USA and in 1999, Department of Pathology,
Microbiology and Immunology at the University of California-Davis.
Brian was appointed as an Associate Professor, Large Animal
Medicine. Duties at the College of Veterinary Medicine, Western
University, California in 2003 and Adjunct Professor, College of
Agriculture, California State Polytechnic University. Brian now
holds the post of Professor, Production Animal Medicine at The Royal
Veterinary College.
Brian has been a
participant in a broad tapestry of experiences during his veterinary
career, ranging from general practice to training and participation
in large animal tertiary care clinical medicine, from performing
field and clinic-based research to the development of a molecular
programme for examining the host-pathogen interface and population
immunogenetics, to designing and promoting a new veterinary school
pedagogy for clinical skill instruction.
Neville
Gregory
Professor of Animal Welfare Physiology
Neville's areas of expertise are
Animal Welfare, Farm Animal Production, Vertebrate Pest Control, and
Meat Science. He was formerly Professor of Animal Welfare Science at
Massey University in New Zealand and he managed a Dairy Research
Centre in Australia. He has published six student textbooks
including, Animal Welfare and Meat Science (CABI Publishing
Co.) and Physiology and Behaviour of Animal Suffering
(Blackwell Publishing Co.) which are recommended reading in parts of
the distance learning courses. His present research interests
include handling practices at livestock markets, wildlife culling
methods and stunning methods of slaughter. Neville's research
interests include the suffering associated with clinical diseases
and disorders, and with routine methods used in managing livestock
and wildlife.
Dirk
Pfeiffer
Professor of Veterinary Epidemiology
Dirk graduated in Veterinary Medicine
in Germany in 1984 and was awarded a Postgraduate Diploma in
Tropical Veterinary Medicine in 1986. He subsequently worked as a
field veterinarian in Colombia and on development projects in Kenya,
Somalia, Malaysia and Thailand until 1988 when he moved to Massey
University in New Zealand, initially as Lecturer in Production
Medicine and Epidemiology, and from 1996 as Senior Lecturer in
Veterinary Epidemiology. In 1994, he was awarded a PhD in Veterinary
Epidemiology. He has held the Chair in Veterinary Epidemiology at
the RVC since 1999 and is also Honorary Professor at the London
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
Dirk teaches
epidemiology at undergraduate and postgraduate levels and has
designed and taught international training courses in veterinary
epidemiology, risk analysis and spatial analysis in Europe,
Australasia and Africa. His particular interest is the epidemiology
and control of infectious diseases, and his involvement in bovine
tuberculosis research started in 1988 when he commenced his PhD
study in New Zealand. His technical expertise includes field
epidemiological and ecological research methods, advanced
epidemiological analysis, spatial and temporal analysis of
epidemiological data, risk analysis, computer modeling of animal
disease, animal health economics and development of animal health
information systems. Dirk provides scientific expertise to various
national and international organizations including the European Food
Safety Authority, Defra, the Food and Agriculture Organization, as
well as various national governments.
Ayona
Silva-Fletcher
Course Director - MSc Veterinary Education
Ayona qualified as a veterinarian from the University of Peradeniya,
Sri Lanka and then did an MSc in Animal Nutrition and a PhD in
University of Aberdeen, UK. Her PhD was on rumen bacteria and she
spent most of her time in Aberdeen working with sheep and cattle.
Following this Ayona spent several years in post-doctoral and
teaching appointments at the University of London (Royal
Postgraduate Medical School), University of Leiden, the Netherlands
and finally at the Open University in Milton Keynes. Ayona joined
the RVC in 2003 as the Director of Distance Learning and played a
major role in expanding the programme with the development of a new
MSc and a short course framework. In 2008 Ayona moved to her current
position in LIVE (Lifelong and Independent Veterinary Education) to
take a leading role in developing a new MSc in Veterinary Education.
Ayona is passionate
about Distance Education and the International outreach of RVC to
the wider veterinary community.
Silvia
Alonso Alvarez
Lecturer in Veterinary Public Health
Silvia graduated in Veterinary Medicine at the University of Leon,
Spain, in 2001. She attended the last year of her studies in
Bologna, Italy, as an Erasmus fellow. After graduation she started a
PhD at the Department of Animal Pathology and Veterinary Public
Health of the Veterinary School of Bologna, which was completed in
2005. Silvia was involved in different research projects focused on
the epidemiology of foodborne diseases and the biology of foodborne
pathogens. She gained experience in microbiology and diagnostic
methods and spent 3 months at the E. coli Reference Laboratory in
Spain where she was trained in molecular analysis techniques. In the
meantime, Silvia also worked as a consultant for a major food
industry in Italy.
After her PhD she
worked as research fellow at the same Department for one year, while
attending part-time an MSc in Epidemiology at the London School of
Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, which was completed in 2007. Her MSc
thesis focused in the use of mathematical modelling to evaluate the
effects of farming density in the spread and control of brucellosis
in Mongolia. Silvia joined the RVC at the beginning of 2008 as a
Lecturer in Veterinary Public Health.
Efstathios
Giotis
Research fellow in Microbiology
Stathis Giotis graduated in Veterinary Medicine from the Aristotle
University of Thessaloniki in Greece in 2001. Stathis Giotis
undertook research training in biotechnology and molecular
microbiology (MSc, PhD). His PhD was awarded for studies on the
genomic and proteomic regulation of Alkali-Tolerance Response in
Listeria monocytogenes in 2006 from the University of Ulster in
Ireland. He has since worked in research projects at the Illinois
State University in the United States and the Roslin Institute in
Scotland, UK, involving genomic work on MRSA and Chicken Anaemia
Virus respectively. In 2009 he moved to the Royal Veterinary College
and he currently works as a researcher for the EU-funded PILGRIM
project with the key objective to provide a range of novel control
measures for the accelerated identification and control of the
emerging resistant bacteria MRSA ST398. His current research
interests involve the investigation and validation of the
antibacterial potential of antimicrobial solutions and technologies
such as photocatalysis against MRSA ST398, as well as the
development of a costeffective decolonisation and environmental
sanitation strategy against MRSA in the farm environment.
Javier
Guitián
Senior Lecturer in Population Medicine
Javier qualified from the University
of Santiago de Compostela, Spain, in 1993. He then studied for a PhD
in Epidemiology and conducted research as a visiting scientist in
the USA, Canada, Brazil and Portugal. In 2002, he was awarded a PhD
in Veterinary Epidemiology (European Doctorate). Javier spent three
years working for the industry and practicing clinical epidemiology
in the context of laboratory diagnostic and herd health in Spain. He
returned to academia and the RVC in 2002. Javier is the Deputy
Course Director for the MSc in Veterinary Epidemiology and the MSc
in Veterinary Epidemiology and Public Health by distance learning.
Javier conducts
applied research aimed at informing management of health and
production of livestock populations. His work integrates field-based
observational studies and quantitative methods such as statistical
modeling, spatial epidemiology and risk analysis. A substantial part
of his research activity takes place in the developing world and, in
collaboration with researchers from the RVC and other research
institutions, as well as international cooperation organizations.
Jonathan
Rushton
Senior Lecturer in Animal Health Economics
Jonathan graduated in Natural
Sciences from Cambridge University, UK, and then completed a Masters
and a PhD in animal health economics from the Veterinary
Epidemiology and Economics Research Unit, University of Reading, UK.
Dr Rushton has worked on animal health issues in Africa, Asia,
Europe and Latin America for the EU, DFID, IICA, ILRI, DANIDA, GTZ
and USAID. His key interests are the role of livestock in the
livelihoods of poor people worldwide, impact of livestock diseases,
the use of participatory methodologies in veterinary epidemiology
and the marketing of agricultural products.
Since 2002,
Jonathan has been involved in the RVC's distance learning courses
developing material on animal health economics, data collection and
policy. Over the last ten years, Jonathan has run short courses on
animal health economics in Portugal, Turkey, Uruguay, Armenia and
for the Central Asian countries.
Kim
Stevens
Assistant Lecturer in Epidemiology
After completing a BSc and MSc in Agriculture (Animal Science) at
the University of Natal in South Africa, Kim worked as a research
assistant at University of Pretoria initially for the Department of
Veterinary Physiology and, later, for the Equine Research Centre.
After moving to the UK, she joined the Epidemiology Division of the
Royal Veterinary College as a research assistant before being
promoted to the position of assistant lecturer. Kim teaches basic
statistics at the undergraduate level and advanced statistical
methods and spatial analysis at the postgraduate level.
Her research
interests include the epidemiology of vector-borne diseases, the
effect of climate change on the epidemiology of disease, risk
assessment and spatial modelling. In addition to her full-time job
responsibilities Kim is also completing a part-time PhD which
focuses on spatial modelling.
Kristien
Verheyen
Lecturer in Clinical Epidemiology
Kristien graduated as a veterinary surgeon from the University of
Ghent, Belgium, in 1995. After short spells in mixed practice and
the pharmaceutical industry, she joined the Epidemiology Unit at the
Animal Health Trust near Newmarket, UK, in 1997. Whereas her initial
role at the Trust focused on equine infectious diseases, in 1998 she
started working full-time on a large-scale epidemiological study of
musculoskeletal injuries in thoroughbred racehorses. During the
course of this project, she also studied for an MSc degree in
Epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine,
University of London, which she completed by distance learning in
2002. She subsequently embarked on a Residency in Equine
Epidemiology which allowed her to obtain a PhD on the 'Epidemiology
of fractures in racehorses in training' from the University of
London in 2005.
Kristien joined the
Royal Veterinary College as a Lecturer in Clinical Epidemiology in
2005. Her research activities remain in the field of equine
epidemiology, with a focus on common diseases that affect equine
welfare in the UK and health and welfare of working horses in
developing countries. She also teaches evidence-based medicine,
epidemiology and biostatistics at undergraduate and postgraduate
level, including on the resident MSc course in Veterinary
Epidemiology.