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Badger Trust renews call to stop culls
While scientists warn culls could spread bTB

The Badger Trust has renewed its appeal to end the badger cull beginning imminently in South-West England.

The trial culls are to start in Gloucestershire and Somerset, in order to help save cattle from bovine tuberculosis (bTB), which is spread by badgers. Up to 100,000 badgers are likely to be killed within the next few years if culls go ahead.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) has released figures in its monthly bTB briefing showing a 30 per cent fall in bTB in the past 12 months - mostly as a result of increased testing.

Badger Trust Chairman, David Williams, said: "DEFRA's conclusion that the improved results are down to better testing are very telling.

"Tucked away in a dull routine report, it admits that, way back in 2007, the Independent Scientific Group (ISG) got it right when it said, after 10 years of research, that the way to bring the spread of bTB under control was not by killing badgers, but by toughening up cattle control measures."

The cull has faced criticism, protests and legal battles in previous weeks, and, a group of 30 scientists have recently written a letter calling on ministers to halt the plans.

The letter said: "As scientists with expertise in managing wildlife and wildlife diseases, we believe the complexities of TB transmission mean that licensed culling risks increasing cattle TB rather than reducing it."

Nine leading vets have also written an open letter to DEFRA and Natural England warning that the cull "will inevitably result in the targeting of many pregnant sows and, if culling extends towards the end of the open season, could result in the shooting of lactating sows, leading to the starvation of dependent cubs".

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Building Great Workplaces webinars return

News Story 1
 BVA has announced a new series of its Building Great Workplaces lunchtime webinars.

Launching from 16 July, the sessions will explore patient safety, motivation, client communication and more.

Its first webinar, exploring neurodiversity in the workplace, will take place at 1pm on Thursday, 16 July. It will feature guest speakers from The Vet Project, a group which supports neurodiversity in veterinary environments.

The following three webinars take place in September, October and November.

Booking is open on the BVA website 

Click here for more...
News Shorts
New form for online veterinary medicines retailers

The Veterinary Medicines Directorate (VMD) has produced a new online form for retailers wishing to sell veterinary medicines on the internet.

The form replace the previous Word version and is part of the VMD's ongoing commitment to digitise its processes. Anyone retailing prescription medicines online, including POM-V, POM-VPS and NFA-VPS categories, is lawfully required to register with the VMD before trading.

The change only applies to new applicants. Retailers already listed on the VMD's Register of Online Retailers or registered under the Accredited Internet Retailer Scheme (AIRS) do not need to do anything.