University of Liverpool Launches £10 Million Small Animal Teaching Hospital

LIVERPOOL, UK – 2007: The University of Liverpool opened its new £10 Million state-of-the-art Small Animal Teaching Hospital, placing the University at the forefront of small animal veterinary care in the UK.

The hospital, based at Leahurst, Wirral, provides the most sophisticated therapies and treatments available to small animals in this country. Its facilities include MRI and CT scanning, a key hole surgery theatre, a radiotherapy unit and digital X-ray technology. The 86-room hospital services the whole of Northern England and North Wales and can accommodate up to 72 in-patients.

Patron of the University’s Small Animal Development campaign which has funded the hospital, His Grace, the Duke of Westminster, said: “The University of Liverpool’s academic expertise spans a wide range of specialisms which is why the institution is ideally placed to provide such a wide breadth of treatments to animals in this country. The Small Animal Teaching Hospital is a European Centre of Excellence in researching, treating and managing illness in small animals.”

The Hospital also marks the opening of Europe’s first Hill’s Pet Mobility Centre to enable a range of orthopaedic and musculoskeletal research projects that could lead to improved treatments for conditions such as arthritis in cats and dogs – a condition which affects 20% of adult dogs and 50% of cats over 10 years of age.

Funded by Hills Pet Nutrition, the centre features innovative equipment including a gait analysis system, canine treadmill and kinematic motion capture technology which enables vets to study animal movement in a non-invasive manner. A patient’s movement is assessed on the treadmill and then evaluated using the gait analysis system so progressions in their mobility can be tracked whilst receiving treatment.

Treatment for cancer in small animals will be provided by the hospital’s Peter Johnson Radiotherapy Unit – the only radiotherapy unit in the UK supported by both a therapeutic radiographer and a specialist veterinary oncologist. The unit’s linear accelerator will provide tumour control and relief from discomfort across a broad range of cancers and will also be used to train health science students on the University’s radiotherapy degree programme

The referral-only Small Animal Teaching Hospital houses four operating theatres - one equipped with the latest technology for key-hole surgery which has become increasingly important for the treatment of animal diseases as it reduces the need for extensive surgical procedures and so decreases recovery time and post-operative discomfort.

The hospital’s imaging facilities are unrivalled in the UK, boasting two digital X-ray rooms, two ultrasound rooms and a dedicated echocardiography room for scanning hearts. The hospital is the only one in the UK with both an MRI and CT scanner in-house.

Professor Sandy Trees, Dean of the Faculty of Veterinary Science commented: “These new facilities will enable Liverpool to provide world-class clinical treatment for cats and dogs as well as support a programme of research projects into diseases affecting small animals.

“Our veterinary students will be trained in the most-up-to-date techniques available, which mean our graduates will consequently have a significant impact on the quality of animal health and welfare in the UK.”

The University is grateful for the support of Sir David and Lady Barnes, Hills Pet Nutrition, the Peter Johnson Foundation, the Lord Leverhulme Charitable Trust, the Pet Plan Trust, the Westminster Foundation, and the Garfield Weston Foundation and numerous other generous donors.


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