We're here with Tim Schell, who runs our Center
for Veterinary Medicine, and Sanjula.
But, Tim, just in case anyone is finishing
their lunch as they're listening to this
And so our role at the FDA and CVM in
particular is to evaluate the products,
it'll allow us to evaluate products
and see if we need to issue any emergency
use authorization.
It'll allow us to speed up the process
to get the information we essentially need
there's never been a reported case
of somebody getting screwworm infection
who had recent travel to Central America,
right, who had, a case of screwworm.
you know, endemic things in cattle that
we just have to keep an eye on and manage.
So there's a lot of us, a government
agencies involved in trying to protect us.
about kind of the broader CVM portfolio
and your passion about a lot of areas.
you mentioned some stat about pet owners
consume more, spend more money than.
supply store, the number of products
available for animals is just incredible.
there could be products in my animals
that have never been reviewed by the FDA.
I do not, my wife's allergic, so although
that's a little too much information,
ownership increasing or decreasing,
it's increased, quite substantially.
post-approval monitoring and real world
data and, domestic manufacturing.
if we sit there and think we're doing fine
and everything doesn't need to change
Now it's up to us to implement those
changes that can benefit our industries.
Is it true that pigs have been sort of,
in one experiment, taught certain tricks,
So you will see sheep scattered all across
the mountainside just by themselves.
In two and threes.
And we were just fascinated that they were
just everywhere, all by themselves.
get products for animals across the finish
line and get and get decisions out.
Screwworm, pigs, veterinary medicine
and getting to know Tim in a deeper way.