About Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow (ISSN 1569 - 0830)

Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow (VetScite) is published exclusively on the World Wide Web, under the domain name ‘Vetscite'.
It is a refereed journal that provides reviews and opinion papers only, not original experimental data. It is an international
current awareness journal for veterinary and related research scientists and publishes a new issue every three months. Inbetween
issues there are regular updates, including items in the News and Education sections, Letters to the Editor, etc. New and
updated items will be highlighted on the home page. Our articles, reviews and editorials intend to provide up-to-date scientific
information that is interesting and relevant to all those working in the veterinary research environment, in its broadest
sense. VetScite also provides links to other quality resources on the World Wide Web that we feel are worthy of recommendation.
We believe that basic science, medical and veterinary research together make-up one single community of biomedical research.
Thus, we aim to provide information that will encourage an interdisciplinary exchange of ideas and, whenever possible, original
and thought provoking opinion on matters important to the biomedical community as a whole. The journal is divided into six
content orientated sections, each of which is described below:
- Home
"Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow" is an international electronic journal for scientists, academic teachers, graduate students
and policy makers. It publishes refereed reviews, interpretation and opinion on topics relevant to the veterinary sciences,
including animal health and welfare. Authors contributing to the journal are chosen for their recognised expertise in specific
subjects.
"Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow" is an independent journal that aims to provide a global forum for the veterinary research arena,
particularly for graduate schools and research institutions dedicated to the veterinary and animal sciences. It is an online
current awareness publication that will attract readers from all disciplines related to the veterinary sciences. A particularly
attractive feature for readers will be the maintenance of a database of scientists that will ensure the journal is a one-stop
portal for contact information.
- News
You will find up-to-the-minute scientific news in this column. Amongst other things will be the latest trends in research
provided by specialists and policy makers, breakthroughs and other items of interest announced in the international press
that have specific relevance to the veterinary sciences and the announcement of Nobel Prize winners in the biomedical sciences.
We also wish to publish news from relevant scientific associations and societies, for instance the dates of forthcoming conferences,
meetings and workshops, as well as reports from these events after they have taken place. This section will be updated more
regularly than the quarterly publication of reviews and full-length articles.
- Education
This section is dedicated to graduate students in the veterinary environment and their supervisors. In due course, it will
contain different types of teaching aids, such as articles, posters, slide collections and videos. It will also provide news
from graduate schools all over the world, publish their education programmes and discuss trends in graduate education. It
will provide a specific place for the discussion of PhD topics and aims to bring into contact with one another those students
who are studying similar subjects. Career opportunities in the veterinary sciences and a VetScite-initiated award, to identify
the "Graduate Student of the Year", will be presented here, too. This section has huge potential and we anticipate an exciting
evolution in its content, with considerable influence coming from our readers.
- Tools
"Tools" could be likened to the "Material and Methods" section found in standard primary publications. It is different, however.
Here, you will find articles that discuss new and emerging technologies, as well as the potentialities and limitations of
established techniques used in biomedical research; also, independent reports on products, such as research tools and fine
biochemicals; and reviews and assessments of new instrumentation. The information and discussion provided here should help
you decide what laboratory 'tools' you may need for your research needs.
- Policies
This section focuses on the relationships between scientific insight and its translation into legislation. It will look at
the issues involved in risk assessment and public perception, act as a legal watch by addressing new, or newly modified, laws
pertaining to animals issues and will explain and discuss the often controversial subject of intellectual property rights
and patents.

Mission Statement

Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow (VetScite) is an electronic current awareness journal that aims to encourage and support the
worlwide veterinary research community; it also wishes to give the community a sense of identity and an appreciation of quality.
It will publish state-of-the-art reviews for scientists, academic teachers, graduate students and policy makers as well as
interpretation and opinion on research findings and issues important to animal health and welfare. Above all, it aims to encourage
the veterinary research community to participate in an interdisciplinary exchange of ideas and the establishment of mutually
beneficial collaborations.

VetScite Editorial Office

- Editor-in-chief
Professor Marian C. Horzinek
Editor
Dr. Anjop Venker-van Haagen
Contact with the Editorial Office may be made using the following information:
-
Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow
Utrecht University
The Netherlands
E-mail: vetscite@uu.nl

Editorial Board

The Editorial Board of Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow (VetScite) consists of members active in veterinary research and academic
teaching. The names and e-mail addresses of current members are listed below. Their task is to contribute to the quality and
visibility of Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow, by reviewing submitted manuscripts, providing feedback and criticism, identifying
scientific news items in their own research environment and - in general - keeping an eye on developments in the veterinary
sciences, in graduate education, novel tools and instrumentation and policy trends that may affect the animal health scene.
Editorial Board members are appointed for a 3-year period, with the possibility of one re-appointment.
These are the members of the Editorial Board; in an update to this list, to be published soon, their respective fields of
specialisation and places of work will be listed:

Instructions for Authors

1. Submission of manuscripts
All manuscripts should be submitted to the managing editor by e-mail (
vetscite@uu.nl) The author should read the Copyright notice for more details.
2. The review process
Manuscripts are reviewed by members of the Editorial Board. They decide about the required revisions of the manuscript before
publication. Each paper is first reviewed by the editors and then sent to referees for peer review . Based on their recommendations,
the editors then decide whether the paper should be accepted as is or revised.
3. Preparation of manuscripts
Manuscripts must be written in English (UK spelling) and complete in all respects, including figures and tables. Abbreviations
should be introduced at first usage, where they should be spelt out in full. Please specify the type of computer and word-processing
package used (do not convert your text file to plain ASCII). Use one of the following formats: Word, Word Perfect or Rich
Text Format. Figures provided electronically must be in gif or jpg extensions.
Ensure that the letter "I" and digit "1" (also letter "O" and digit "0") have been used properly, and format your paper (tabs,
indents, etc.) consistently. Characters not available on your word processor (Greek letters, mathematical symbols, etc.) should
not be left open but indicated by a unique code (e.g. gralpha, #, etc., for the Greek letter). Such codes should be used consistently
throughout the entire text. Please make a list of the codes and provide a key. Further information may be obtained from the
managing editor (
vetscite@uu.nl).
The title of the paper must be followed by the full title, names, academic or professional affiliations and complete addresses
of all authors, and a colour portrait as a *.gif or *.jpg file; these items will be formated and assembled on a separate page,
together with a brief curriculum vitae. The name and address of the author to whom correspondence may be sent should be indicated,
including an e-mail address, telephone number and fax number.
A structured summary of about 100 to 200 words should be included with the manuscript together with 3-6 key words which encapsulate
the principal subjects covered by the paper and which will be used for indexing. A summary should be understandable to readers
who have not read the rest of the paper. It should not contain any citations of other published work. Key words must be selected
from the MESH terms (
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/pubs/factsheets/mesh.html).
Illustrations, figures, tables, photographs must be submitted in a form and condition suitable for electronic publishing.
They must appear in the text and be numbered in Arabic numerals according to the sequence of their appearance in the text
(e.g. Fig. 1., Fig. 2.; Table 1., Table 2.). In addition, they must be provided with a brief descriptive title and legend.
Tables of numerical data should be typed and be provided with labelled axes.
All literature references cited in the text should be listed at the end of the manuscript, arranged in alphabetical order
and then numbered. References in the text should be cited at the appropriate places, with numbers in square brackets. Literature
references must be complete, including names and initials of all authors cited, title of paper referred to, title, volume,
year, and first and last page numbers of the article in a periodical. Journal titles should not be abbreviated but given in
full. The PubMed URL of the reference should be looked up and provided in parentheses (
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?CMD=Details&DB=PubMed).
The form of literature references to books should be: author(s), initials, title of book, publisher and city, year and page
number referred to. References to authors contributing to multi-author books or to proceedings printed in book form should
be similar to those for books. If a reference does not refer to a published manuscript or one accepted for publication please
cite it in the text as e.g. Jekyll and Hyde, 1889, personal communication. References to sources on the Internet should contain
the title of the web site, the Uniform Resource Locator (URL or Internet address) and the date on which the existence of the
web page was last checked.

How to advertise in VetScite

Space is available to companies that wish to have their logo or product highlighted on VetScite web pages as an advertisement;
also corporate sponsorship of VetScite will be considered, if it is compatible with VetScite's mission. Advertisement is subject
to the restrictions that the Editors have placed on the nature, extent and appearance of such content on VetScite web pages.
Sponsorships can also provide links to company web sites. However, VetScite is mandated to provide as much information as
possible to its users and cannot accept any sponsorships or advertisement that restricts the ability of VetScite to provide
product information news, or web site links for any product information, service, or company, regardless of any financial
support from that or other companies. Since VetScite attempts to provide information about and/or links to all relevant services,
products, manufacturers, and suppliers - advertisements typically take the form of payment for the appropriate placement of
a company logo or graphic, that will facilitate a user's locating or linking to a particular product, service or company.
Sponsorship, sponsorship recognition, and advertisement are limited and must be in agreement with VetScite policy. Only content
considered relevant and useful to the veterinary research community and compatible with the academic not-for-profit status
of VetScite is acceptable. VetScite reserves the right to refuse or discontinue any sponsorship, logo presentation, or advertisement
without notice.
Paid advertisement is accepted under VetScite guidelines, subjected to the approval of the Editorial Board. Items will be
circulated on VetScite pages at defined places and frequencies. This can be provided as general advertisement, or as advertisement
targeted to users of particular VetScite web site pages (e.g. in the Tools section).

Citing Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow

Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow (VetScite) is an online only publication and thus articles cannot be cited in the traditional
format used for paper publications. The journal is published quarterly; each one of the four annual issues has its own number
and forms part of an annual volume. The journal volume and issue numbers are indicated at the top of every page on the web
site. Articles and any other items of interest are archived as soon as they are removed from the current issue. All archived
items will retain their original web site address (URL) so that this information may be provided in their citation details.
An article's URL simply replaces the page numbers given in citations of traditional paper publications.
The following example is recommended as the citation format of articles featured in Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow:
Horzinek, M.C. and Lutz, H. (2001) An update of feline infectious peritonitis. Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow , Issue 1 (http://www.vetscite.org/cgi-bin/pw.exe/vst/reviews/index_1_0800.htm)

Copyright Notice

© Copyright Marian C. Horzinek, The Netherlands 2000
This World Wide Web site is the property of Marian C. Horzinek, The Netherlands, which also applies to the name 'Veterinary
Sciences Tomorrow' and the Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow logo. 'Vetscite' is a registered domain name, with the extensions
.com, .net and .org.
All copyright, trademark and other proprietary rights in the Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow site and in the software, text,
graphics, design elements, video, audio and any other materials originated or used by Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow at this
site are reserved to the author.
You may not reproduce, upload, post transmit, download or redistribute any part of the Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow information
or information accessed at other sites through links made at the Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow site, other than printing out
or downloading portions of the text and images for your own personal, non-commercial use. All other usage or distribution
is illegal under international copyright treaties.
You may not modify the Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow site, or any material residing on other linked sites. Domain names and
trademarks of linked sites, or contained in information at other sites, are the sole property of their respective owners.
No affiliation with, endorsement of, or sponsorship by Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow should be inferred.
No part of the material protected by this copyright may be republished, reproduced, or utilised in any form or by any means,
electronic or mechanical (including photocopying, recording, broadcasting or by any other information storage and retrieval
system), without permission in writing from Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow, The Netherlands.

Privacy Statement Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow

Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow asks you to register your email address in order to gain access to the site. These addresses
are collected purely for our own promotional use, they will not be disclosed to third parties. Any personal information disclosed
to Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow is collected and maintained solely by Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow and is not accessible to
any third parties.
If you contact Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow, we may keep a record of that correspondence. We do not collect any e-mail addresses
of those who communicate with Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow via e-mail. We use the information provided so that we may respond
to the e-mail.
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computer you are using, but nothing more. Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow is not generally interested in any one individual and
does not collect personally identifiable information about any one person using cookies. Since cookies are only text files,
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The use of cookies is now an industry standard, and they are currently used on most major web sites. Most web browsers are
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Disclaimers

Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow makes sincere efforts to ensure the accuracy of information posted by its editorial team on the
Vetscite but does not make any efforts to check information provided by readers or by third party content providers. There
may be errors, inaccuracies or omissions in the information available on the Vetscite. Accordingly, Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow
cannot be held responsible or liable for errors, inaccuracies or omissions or for any loss caused by any reader's reliance
on or use of this information. Readers who rely on the information contained on this web site or on other web sites accessed
from this one do so at their own risk and are advised to check any information with independent sources before acting on it.
Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow serves its readers as a forum for the presentation and discussion of issues important to the
advancement of science specifically within the veterinary research environment. We encourage the publication of material that
may be of a minority point of view or contraversial in opinion. Accordingly, all articles published reflect the individual
view of the authors and not official points of view adopted by Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow.
The content of all advertisements appearing on this web site is the sole responsibility of the company placing the advertisement.
Veterinary Sciences Tomorrow does not endorse either the accuracy or reliability of the content of the advertisements, or
of any products connected therewith.
