General considerations
Historical background
Historical evidence, like that from currently developing nations, indicates that veterinary medicine originally developed in response to the needs of pastoral and agricultural man along with human medicine. It seems likely that a veterinary profession existed throughout a large area of Africa and Asia from at least 2000 bc. Ancient Egyptian literature includes monographs on both animal and human diseases. Evidence of the parallel development of human and veterinary medicine is found in the writings of Hippocrates on medicine and of Aristotle, who described the symptomatology and therapy of the diseases of animals, including man. Early Greek scholars, noting the similarities of medical problems among the many animal species, taught both human and veterinary medicine. In the late 4th century bc, Alexander the Great designed programs involving the study of animals, and medical writings of the Romans show that some of the most important early observations on the natural history of disease were made by men who wrote chiefly about agriculture, particularly the aspect involving domesticated animals.
Most of the earliest suggestions of relationships between human health and animal diseases were part of folklore, magic, or religious practice. The Hindu’s concern for the well-being of animals, for example, originated in his belief in reincarnation. From the pre-Christian Era to about 1500, the distinctions between the practices of human and veterinary medicine were not clear-cut; this was especially true in the fields of obstetrics and orthopedics, in which animal doctors in rural areas often delivered babies and set human-bone fractures. It was realized, however, that training in one field was inadequate for practicing in the other, and the two fields were separated.
Veterinary literature from the civilizations of Greece and Rome contains reference to “herd factors” in disease; contagion within groups of animals kept together, therefore, was recognized, and both quarantine and slaughter were used to control outbreaks of livestock diseases. Rinderpest (cattle plague) was the most important livestock disease from the 5th century until control methods were developed. Serious outbreaks of the disease prompted the founding of the first veterinary college (École Nationale Vétérinaire), in Lyon, France, in 1762. Many aspects of animal diseases are best understood in terms of population or herd phenomena; for example, herds of livestock, rather than individual animals, are vaccinated against specific diseases, and housing, nutrition, and breeding practices are related to the likelihood of illness in the herd.
The work of Pasteur was of fundamental significance to general medicine and to agriculture. Veterinarians became concerned with foods of animal origin after the discovery of microorganisms and their identification with diseases in man and other animals. Efforts were directed toward protecting humans from diseases of animal origin, primarily those transmitted through meat or dairy products. Modern principles of food hygiene, first established for the dairy and meat-packing industries in the 19th and early 20th centuries, have been generally applied to other food-related industries. The veterinary profession, especially in Europe, assumed a major role in early food-hygiene programs.
Since World War II, the eradication of animal diseases, rather than their control, has become increasingly important, and conducting basic research, combatting zoonoses, and contributing to man’s food supply have become indispensable services of veterinary medicine.