By
Donald H. Harrison
Rishon LeZion, Israel (special) -- Dr. Yoni Peres, director of the teaching
hospital at Hebrew University’s
School of Veterinary Medicine, was shmoozing recently with Dr. Stanley
Newman, a retired veterinarian from Springfield, N.J., about how rabies
affect American and Israeli cats and dogs.
|
“In the States,” said Peres, “the reservoir
for rabies is the raccoon. Because people keep their dogs at home, they
don’t get mixed up with raccoons. But cats sometimes go outside and
have contact with raccoons, and that is how they get the rabies. In America,
cats are more high risk than dogs for rabies.
“Here,” the Israeli veterinarian added, “the situation is the opposite,
because the reservoirs for rabbis are the wolves, jackals and hyenas. Those
animals live around towns and cities. When they get rabid, they lose their
fear of man. They come in and attack anything. If they encounter
a cat, the cat is fast enough to run away but dogs are more clumsy and
are more curious, so they get in contact with these animals. So the dog
is the number one rabid animal in Israel rather than the cat.” Newman,
a past president of the American Veterinarians for Israel, noted during |
Dr. Yoni Peres |
a tour led by Peres of the Israeli veterinary school that in Israel many
cats seem to wander wild on city streets--seemingly far more than in the
United States.Peres, son of former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres,
estimated that hundreds of thousands -- if not a million -- feral cats
create a problem in Israel and added that “there is a big controversy what
to do with them.”
The cats, like squirrels in the United States, “live on the streets;
they live on the garbage,”
Peres said. “If you decided to have a program where you secured and
closed all the
garbage cans, and the garbage rooms, then they will starve and they
will become sicker and
sicker and there will be more diseases. Their immune systems will weaken
and you will
have small sick cats on the streets.
“The other problem is that if you decrease the cat population, you might
increase, or
interfere with the balance, of mice and rats. Which is worse, I don’t
know -- cats or rats?
“Also some people feed the cats. You can see people going down from
their buildings with
their leftovers and a group of 20-30 cats will come to be fed.”
Peres said the municipality of Tel
Aviv is catching the cats, neutering them, and then
putting them back on the street, in the hope of controlling the population.
“But some
biologists say this won’t do the job,” Peres added. “This is a big
controversy.” Thus far, Peres said, cats have caused no real problem for
the human population. “But imagine what would happen if they should
all get rabies.”
Private veterinarians in Israel sometimes refer difficult cases to the
Veterinary Hospital “if
they don’t have the facilities or the knowledge,” and other pets are
brought in by owners who
are seeking a “second opinion” on their treatment. Still others
are brought to the hospital at
hours when regular veterinarians are not available.
Creation of the veterinary school in 1985 occasioned some controversy
among already
established veterinarians in Israel, who felt the market was saturated
and did not welcome
even more competition. Peres said the criticism has become less intense
in more recent years. Before the school’s creation, he said, about
100 Israelis a year became veterinarians by graduating from foreign schools,
particularly in Italy. Now, the annual crop of veterinarians still
is about 100, but 40 of them are graduated from the Hebrew University.
Newman’s veterinarian group once had backed their Israeli colleagues’
opposition to the
school, but eventually switched its position and became a supporter.
With about 500
members throughout the United States--most of them Jewish--the American
Veterinarians
for Israel periodically contribute equipment for the teaching hospital.
Peres said graduating new veterinarians is but one aspect of the school.
“A veterinary
school is a center for excellence, for continuing education, for contacts
with the Middle East
and the rest of the world, and for increasing the level of veterinary
medicine in the country,”
he said.
Veterinarians from Egypt and from
the Palestinian Authority
come to the school for several
months of intensive courses, as do veterinarians who have immigrated
to Israel from the
former Soviet Union. “We also wanted to have contracts with the
Jordanians,
but there
were political problems,” Peres said.
The E-shaped school building is beginning to bulge at the seams as a
result of the varied
activities that occur there. One class has to be taught in the bomb
shelter because of a
lack of classroom space. There also is a need for more research space
and equipment,
according to Peres, who does quite a bit of fundraising for the school.
Although the school’s focus is mainly clinical, Peres said, “I would
say that we have some
nice achievements in research, especially in the field of small animal
and canine infectious
diseases. As for large animals, we have conducted some research on
bovine lameness.
And we have been working in the field of wildlife diseases.”
Following in his father’s footsteps, Peres hopes to create partnerships
between the
veterinary school and similar institutions throughout the Middle East
to conduct joint
research, particularly on how to curb animal diseases that can spread
to humans.
|