Dr Dan O’Neill, Associate Professor in Companion Animal Epidemiology at the RVC, has been given the RVCS Impact Award for his work developing the pioneering VetCompass initiative which gathers epidemiological data from 1800 first opinion and referral practices around the UK.

The VetCompass database now holds millions of anonymised veterinary clinical records collected from primary practices and referral centres across the UK.

The records allow researchers to investigate a range and frequency of companion animal health problems and identify important risk factors for the most common disorders.

This research can then be used by veterinary professionals in clinical practice to help improve education and outcomes related to animal welfare.

Dan’s nomination included recognition for VetCompass operating under non-profit and open-access principles and embedding mandatory welfare pathways into all studies.

VetCompass was also recognised for having supported more than 140 research papers supporting broad welfare initiatives spanning breed-related health, extreme conformations, welfare scoring, specific disorders, oncology, disease surveillance, prescribing practices, and more.

Dan said: “I am truly humbled to receive this recognition from the RCVS.

"When I moved from clinical practice to the RVC 15 years ago to develop VetCompass as my PhD project, I could only dream of the untapped potential for practising veterinary surgeons and veterinary nurses to contribute to cutting edge science and welfare.

"And now the amazing VetCompass team at the RVC have made that aspiration to redefine the clinical evidence base on companion animal welfare a reality.

"I now need to reset even higher animal welfare dreams for the next 15 years.”

https://www.rvc.ac.uk/vetcompass/about/overview 

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