Lisbeth Rem Jessen
Associate Professor
Section for Internal Medicine, Oncology and Clinical Pathology
Dyrlægevej 16, 1870 Frederiksberg C
Section for Internal Medicine, Oncology and Clinical Pathology
Dyrlægevej 16
1870 Frederiksberg C
Current position
Associate professor companion animal internal medicine
Researchgroup leader
Main Research area
Infectious diseases in dogs and cats
Current research
Urinary tract infections
Antimicrobial stewardship
Recent Appointments
- Workpackage leader of the European Network for Optimization of Veterinary Antimicrobial
Treatment (ENOVAT) guidelines initiative https://enovat.eu/link-1-wg4/ - Chair of the Antimicrobial Guidelines in Canine Acute Diarrhea drafting group.
- Chair of the ESGVM (ESCMID Study Group Veterinary Microbiology) guidelines project.
- Academic co-ordinator, and chairman of the National Danish working-group on antibiotic use guidelines.
- Programme director of the UCPH residency programme in companion animal internal medicine under the auspice of the European College of Veterinary Internal Medicine for Companion Animal(ECVIM-CA).
Previous positions
- Staff veterinarian in private small animal practice (Ambulatorio Veterinario, Monte Parioli, Roma) in
Italy from 1997 to 2000 and at the small animal hospital (Regionsdjursjukhuset ANICURA
Helsingborg) in Sweden from 2000- 2003. - Internship and residency in internal medicine at UCPH (2003-2007)
- Head of the Internal Medicine Clinical Service at UCPH (2008-2010).
Assistant professor internal medicine, UCPH (2010 – 2015).
Conflicts of interest
Funding obtained from:
- European Cooperation in Science & Technology
- Agria Forskningsfond
Consultency fees obtained from:
- The Danish Veterinary Association (DDD)
Speakers fees & conference participation obtained from:
- ACVIM, ECVIM, ICOHAR
Primary fields of research
Possible conflicts of interest
ID: 6056363
Most downloads
-
1014
downloads
Endogenous fibrinolytic potential in tissue-plasminogen activator-modified thromboelastography analysis is significantly decreased in dogs suffering from diseases predisposing to thrombosis
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
Published -
912
downloads
Multiplate can be used to detect increased platelet reactivity in dogs with diseases known to predispose for hypercoagulability and thrombosis
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference abstract in proceedings › Research
Published -
301
downloads
Optimization and evaluation of Flexicult(®) Vet for detection, identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing of bacterial uropathogens in small animal veterinary practice
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
Published