The invisible ingredient

Dr. Kareen Robinson’s veterinary career took an unforeseen trajectory that ultimately positioned her at the forefront of Jamaica’s food security efforts. Initially drawn to equine medicine during her studies at The University of the West Indies, St Augustine campus, her professional destiny was reshaped by a mandatory externship at Jamaica Broilers that revealed the profound interconnectedness of animal health, agricultural systems, and national food security.

Twelve years later, Dr. Robinson serves as senior poultry veterinarian at The Best Dressed Chicken Field Operations, where her responsibilities encompass far more than animal health. Her portfolio spans animal welfare protocols, biosecurity measures, sanitation standards, environmental management, production efficiency optimization, and the critical task of preventing avian influenza from reaching Jamaican shores. While a subsequent externship in Florida honed her clinical skills, she attributes her expertise to hands-on field experience gained through extensive farm visits under diverse conditions.

Beyond technical proficiency, Dr. Robinson emphasizes the human dimension of her work. ‘Sometimes the hardest part of the job isn’t the birds,’ she notes. ‘It’s being there for the people.’ She describes farm life as demanding in ways that metrics cannot capture, requiring emotional availability and interpersonal skills that formal training often overlooks. Communication, she asserts, represents the most critical competency in her role—the ability to ask pertinent questions and convey information effectively prevents misunderstandings that could compromise entire operations.

Despite operating largely outside public awareness—many Jamaicans remain unaware that veterinarians oversee poultry production—Dr. Robinson’s work occupies a crucial intersection between agriculture and public health. Her team maintains constant vigilance, with chick placements occurring multiple times weekly and around-the-clock readiness for emerging challenges. The physical demands include inspecting housing systems, analyzing ventilation data, monitoring trends, collecting samples, and collaborating with farmers managing complex operational pressures.

Currently, avian influenza prevention dominates Dr. Robinson’s priorities. Though Jamaica has reported no local cases, she maintains a proactive stance, treating the threat as imminent. ‘There’s no cure. Prevention is everything,’ she states. Her strategy involves meticulous documentation of seasonal variations, performance fluctuations, and operational adaptations to climate changes and global outbreaks. This data-driven approach creates an institutional memory that enables predictive action rather than mere reaction. ‘Data speaks more than anything else,’ she explains. ‘It shows you the gaps and where you need to improve.’

For students considering similar paths, Dr. Robinson offers candid advice: prioritize passion over financial incentives. Her unexpected journey from horse enthusiast to poultry specialist demonstrates how vocational detours can lead to impactful careers addressing fundamental societal needs.