Office of Communications2018-08-232018-08-232008-06-03https://hdl.handle.net/1813/58306This news item is about: Today, diseases are global, said Corrie Brown, a professor of veterinary pathology at the University of Georgia, speaking at the 2008 Smith-Kilborne Foreign Animal Disease Program at Cornell on May 28. Globalization, said Brown, has contributed to existing diseases now appearing in new geographical areas, such as West Nile virus; to trade-generated disease such as the melamine dog-food contamination of 2006 that involved China, Canada and the United States; and to the rise in previously unknown animal and human diseases such as SARS, HIV-AIDS and BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy, also known as mad cow disease).en-USCornell University. College of Veterinary Medicine -- Periodicals. Brown, Corrie2008 CVM News: Troubling link of globalization to animal and human disease cited at veterinary college program2008 CVM News: Students attend Smith-Kilbourne Programarticle