Webinars for the whole veterinary team
Update on the role of companion animals in the COVID-19 pandemic

Speaker
Dr. R. Michael Lappin
Veterinarians
April 16, 2020
Summary
Objectives:
- To learn about the different coronaviruses that infect dogs and cats.
- To understand what is known about SARS-CoV-2 infections in experimentally infected animals.
- To update attendees on what is known about dogs and cats that are naturally infected with SARS-CoV-2.
- To learn how to lessen risk that veterinary staff members will acquire SARS-CoV-2 infection.
- To understand that there is currently no evidence that naturally exposed cats or dogs can infect a person with SARS-CoV-2 and induce COVID-19
When is it?
Time: 10:00 EDT
Time: 00:00 AEST [Sydney] | 2:00 NZST [Auckland]
When is it?
Time: 19:00 EDT
Date: Friday, 17 April 2020
Time: 09:00 AEST [Sydney] | 11:00 NZST [Auckland]
Speaker

R. Michael Lappin
DVM, PhD, DACVIM
Dr. Lappin graduated from Oklahoma State University and then completed an internship, internal medicine residency, and PhD program in Parasitology at the University of Georgia. Dr. Lappin is the Kenneth W. Smith Professor in Small Animal Clinical Veterinary Medicine at Colorado State University, is the director of the “Center for Companion Animal Studies” and he helps direct the shelter medicine program. He is the chair of the WSAVA One Health Committee. His principal areas of interest are prevention of infectious diseases, the upper respiratory disease complex, infectious causes of fever, infectious causes of diarrhea, and zoonoses. His research group has published over 300 primary papers or book chapters concerning small animal infectious diseases. Awards include the Norden Distinguished Teaching Award, NAVC Small Animal Speaker of the Year, the European Society of Feline Medicine International Award for Outstanding Contribution to Feline Medicine, the Winn Feline Research Award, the ACVIM Robert W. Kirk Award for Professional Excellence, the WSAVA Scientific Achievement Award, and the AVMA Clinical Research Award.