The CVIM based at Pirbright was established with funding from the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office, Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF). It was established to help answer an unmet global need to develop vaccines to control disease in livestock. Both the VDC and CVIM have been established to accelerate commercial development, with a recognized effort to prioritize neglected livestock diseases and urgent emerging zoonotic diseases.
"The growing collaboration between these two institutes is a testament of our partnership to address some of the major global challenges related to food security for the world, particularly for low-and-middle-income countries," said Professor Bryan Charleston, FRS, director of The Pirbright Institute. Both organizations expect this collaboration to expand to groups in low-and-middle-income countries.
" VIDO’s research efforts address diseases that have the potential to inflict profound impacts on both humans and animals. These diseases pose a risk to the well-being and welfare of everyone," said USask President Peter Stoicheff. "Together, the VDC and CVIM are working towards combating this problem and creating solutions that will benefit people around the world."
Source : Pembinavalley online