Veteran veterinarian honoured for animal care

Andy Fletch, who oversaw animal welfare at McMaster University for 15 years until his retirement in 2006, received the 2021 Harry C. Rowsell Award for Outstanding Service to the Canadian Council on Animal Care (CCAC) this month.

May 26, 2021

Andy Fletch, one of Canada’s first university lab animal veterinarians.

One of Canada’s first university lab animal veterinarians is being honoured for championing the ethical treatment of research animals over two decades of volunteer work.

Andy Fletch, who oversaw animal welfare at McMaster University for 15 years until his retirement in 2006, received the 2021 Harry C. Rowsell Award for Outstanding Service to the Canadian Council on Animal Care (CCAC) this month.

“I’m obviously very honoured by it. I knew Harry Rowsell as a professional colleague and a mentor who lent my career so much support, encouraging me to specialize in laboratory animal medicine,” said Fletch.

“Harry advised me to apply for the position at McMaster in 1991, when I needed a change of career.”

Fletch juggled his full-time job as the university veterinarian at McMaster with his CCAC volunteer work, inspecting labs across Canada to check if they met ethical treatment and welfare standards. This included ensuring that no animal suffered unnecessarily, as well as being well cared-for and disease-free.

Passing a CCAC inspection meant labs could be certified as meeting the organization’s ethical standards – a key condition for federal research funding.

Volunteering for the CCAC also helped Fletch make improvements at McMaster. For example, after seeing how one facility used clean room technology to keep its animals disease-free, he had it installed at the university’s labs.

“Yes, I plagiarized this idea,” quipped Fletch.

During his career at McMaster, Fletch was also involved in Canadian Institutes for Health Research audit committees and biosafety and animal care committees.

At McMaster, Fletch and his roughly 40 staff supervised the care of hundreds of animals, from mice to rats to bats. His team was frequently called upon to provide solutions when faced with ethical or practical issues involving research animals.

Fletch believed the best way to improve the ethical care and use of animals in science was through continued education and training of veterinarians, technicians, animal care committee members, facility staff and managers and scientists. He also helped educate students in the community by making presentations in Hamilton-area schools.

“It was a source of tremendous satisfaction not only for myself but also my whole team. I suppose that’s what you call real job satisfaction when you get results like we did,” said Fletch.

It was two team members, his successor as university veterinarian Kathleen Delaney, and facilities director Karen Gourlay who nominated Fletch for the award.

“CCAC program participants relied on Dr. Fletch for his expertise and constructive advice, and found him easy to approach thanks to his open, positive, and humble demeanour,” wrote Delaney and Gourlay in the nomination.

“Similar to his mentor Dr. Rowsell, Dr. Fletch was also a mentor to many.”

Close up of a red-haired tennis player's face with his racquet in front of it, about to make contact with the ball.

Analysis: The mental edge that separates elite athletes from the rest

Some of the most decisive moments in sport hinge on not just strength and reflexes, but the athlete's ability to perceive, process and act on information, writes Mallory Terry.
A young person with long hair covers their face in a distressed way while sitting at a desk with a book open in front of them.

Cannabis, teens and mental health: Ontario youth experience sharp rise in depression and anxiety

Psychological distress among Ontario teenagers nearly tripled over a decade, and it's worse for frequent cannabis users, McMaster research shows.
A group of five people standing indoors in front of a stone wall and a large black screen. They are dressed in formal and semi-formal attire, including suits, blazers and patterned dresses. Two large balloon arrangements in shades of purple, gold and white are positioned on the left side near a podium. The setting is an event space with bright lighting and glass doors visible in the background.

Donor gift launches initiatives for youth health literacy and injury prevention

The investment supports critical initiatives at the Mary Heersink School of Global Health and Social Medicine aimed at improving the health and well-being of children and youth, especially those from diverse and underserved communities.