5th BUDAPEST International Congress on Nursing, Medical & Veterinary Sciences: BNMVS-27

Call for papers/Topics

All Abstracts, Reviews, short articles, Full articles, Posters are welcomed related with any of the following research fields:

1. Medical Sciences (Human Medicine)

Medical sciences focus primarily on the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of human disease, heavily anchored in advanced pathology and clinical interventions.

Independent Medical Topics

  • Pathology and Pathophysiology: Cellular adaptations, tissue inflammation, mechanisms of neoplasia (tumor growth), and systemic organ failure.

  • Clinical Pharmacology: Therapeutics, pharmacokinetics (how the body processes drugs), drug-drug interactions, and toxicodynamics.

  • Medical Diagnostics and Imaging: Radiology (X-ray, MRI, CT scans), molecular diagnostics, histopathology, and laboratory medicine.

  • Surgical Specialties: General surgery, orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery, cardiothoracic interventions, and minimally invasive procedures.

  • Internal Medicine Subspecialties: Cardiology, gastroenterology, neurology, endocrinology, nephrology, and pulmonology.

Interrelated Medical Subtopics

  • Neuro-Medicine: The overlap between neurology (physical brain structures) and psychiatry (mental health conditions).

  • Cardio-Pulmonary Medicine: The tight interaction between heart function and respiratory health during acute diseases.

2. Nursing Sciences

Nursing centers on holistic patient care, health promotion, clinical management, and the human response to acute and chronic illnesses.

Independent Nursing Topics

  • Fundamentals of Nursing: Patient assessment, vital signs monitoring, hygiene care, wound management, and basic clinical procedures.

  • Nursing Theories and Frameworks: Orem’s self-care deficit theory, Watson’s theory of human caring, and the nursing process (Assessment, Diagnosis, Planning, Implementation, Evaluation).

  • Community and Public Health Nursing: Home health care, epidemiology in communities, outbreak containment, and preventative health education.

  • Nursing Leadership and Management: Ward management, healthcare resource allocation, staffing models, and clinical auditing.

  • Advanced Practice Nursing: Clinical nurse specialists, nurse anesthetists, and nurse practitioners.

Interrelated Nursing Subtopics

  • Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing: Intersecting nursing care models with clinical psychiatry to manage complex mental health crises.

  • Maternal-Child Nursing: Combining obstetrics, neonatology, and pediatrics into a continuous care model for mothers and infants.

3. Veterinary Sciences

Veterinary sciences explore the health, behavior, and medical treatment of non-human animals, spanning companion animals, livestock, and wildlife.

Independent Veterinary Topics

  • Comparative Animal Anatomy and Physiology: Structural and functional differences between monogastric animals (dogs, pigs) and ruminants (cattle, sheep).

  • Production Animal Medicine (Livestock): Herd health management, dairy and meat production optimization, and poultry medicine.

  • Companion Animal Medicine: Canine, feline, and equine internal medicine, surgery, and preventative wellness.

  • Exotic and Wildlife Medicine: Avian medicine, reptile therapeutics, zoo animal management, and conservation medicine.

  • Veterinary Theriogenology: Animal reproduction, artificial insemination, embryotransfer, and obstetrics.

Interrelated Veterinary Subtopics

  • Equine Sports Medicine: Blending musculoskeletal physiology, biomechanics, and targeted physical therapy for performance horses.

  • Veterinary Behavioral Medicine: The intersection of animal psychology, neurobiology, and environmental management to treat behavioral issues.

4. Interrelated Fields (The Convergence Zones)

These critical topics sit directly at the intersection of Nursing, Medical, and Veterinary Sciences, showcasing how the fields rely on one another.

One Health (The Medical-Veterinary-Environmental Interface)

  • Zoonotic Diseases: Pathogens that leap between animals and humans, such as rabies, avian influenza, and brucellosis.

  • Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR): How antibiotic overuse in both livestock farming (Veterinary) and human clinics (Medical) drives global bacterial resistance.

  • Comparative Medicine: Studying naturally occurring diseases in animals (like cancers in dogs) to better understand and cure similar diseases in humans.

  • Food Safety and Security: Veterinary inspection of animal products ensuring toxicological and microbiological safety before human consumption.

Clinical Teamwork and Systems Interface

  • Interprofessional Collaboration: How nurses and physicians coordinate in high-stress clinical environments to reduce medical errors.

  • Translational Research: Applying laboratory discoveries in basic medical and veterinary sciences directly into bedside nursing and clinical treatments.

  • Bioethics and Medical Law: Navigating end-of-life care, informed consent, and animal welfare regulations across clinical practices