Years in Review


2022 Year in Review

Changes and Accomplishments 

In 2022, the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine continued to provide excellent care where it was needed the most, innovate in research, and advance the profession of veterinary medicine. 

The school underwent some important changes, including removing the GRE requirement for DVM student admissions after a Senate Faculty vote. The California Raptor Center hosted its first in-person open house in nearly three years due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and Cori the Rocket Dog made her debut as kickoff tee retrieval dog during a football game against UC San Diego. 

Faculty and students were recognized with numerous awards, which are summarized in the spring and fall issues of Synergy magazine. Big news included Carrie Finno being named a UC Davis Chancellor’s Fellow. Candice Price was selected for a 2021-22 Chancellor’s Fellowship for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. Christine Kreuder Johnson was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
 

Meeting the Need

The UC Davis Koret Shelter Medicine Program kicked off a five-year project to improve the lives of at-risk animals in California and provide much needed resources, including critical funding, onsite and virtual consultations, and expert-led training, to shelters that serve this vulnerable population. This unique state-funded initiative was made possible in 2021 when California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed budget legislation that includes $45 million in one-time support for a statewide Animal Shelter Assistance Program, an augmentation to $5 million earmarked earlier that year. 

Veterinary students helped perform low-cost spay surgeries to dogs with owners residing in the Sacramento or Yolo Counties and coming from an underserved population or qualifying for a financial assistance program through Spay Day clinics.

The Wildlife Disaster Network continued to rescue and treat burned or injured wildlife following devastating California wildfires.

The school started up the Accessible Veterinary Care Program, a program aiming to assist animals, people, and organizations in need while gaining training opportunities for students. The program also provides a framework for the many community care services already in place at UC Davis, like the Orphan Kitten Project (OKP), Fracture Program, Community Surgery Service, and Knights Landing One Health Clinic. 

The Large Animal Clinic served as the on-site veterinary team during the 101st Red Bluff Round-Up Rodeo, the largest 3-day rodeo in the world.  
 

Moving Health Forward

The new UC Davis CounterACT Center of Excellence was established for the purpose of focusing on treatments and strategies to prevent long-term consequences after chemical nerve agent exposure, made possible by a grant from The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Strokes. 

The Pacific Southwest Center of Excellence in Vector-Borne Diseases (PacVec) continued its work with six other research universities in research, training, and outreach on vectors to manage and prevent mosquito and tick-borne diseases. The center was awarded a new 5-year, $10 million grant. 

The Equine Reproduction Service started offering field service visits to local facilities within a service area of campus for the northern California equine community

The Large Animal Clinic opened three new equine stalls and an adjacent treatment area, repurposing an area of the hospital that had not been utilized in more than a decade. The new space increases efficiency throughout the hospital by making it possible to treat hospitalized horses from adjacent stalls in this treatment area instead of transporting them to other examination rooms in the barn. 

The Dentistry and Oral Surgery Service (DOSS) opened a monthly Stomatitis Clinic where they dedicate two days each month exclusively to stomatitis patients.

Important strides towards preparing for the next pandemic were made. A new consortium of UC campuses and national laboratories harnessing the research and scientific brainpower needed to treat and prevent the next pandemic, called ATTACK, was formed. They are working together towards antiviral drug discovery and development. The Office of Research hosted a Team Research Forum with six experts, including Dr. Christine Kreuder Johnson who studies spillover and spillback of SARS-CoV-2 between animals and people, to discuss the strength of interdisciplinary research in predictive intelligence for navigating the risks of future pandemics. Further, researchers at UC Davis have produced antibodies to the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein in hen eggs
 

Serving the Profession

UC Davis retained its QS World Ranking of first in the nation and second in the world in veterinary science. UC Davis was also ranked third for top schools for Hispanics in graduate STEM programs in the category Agricultural/Animal/Plant/Veterinary Science by the Hispanic Outlook magazine.

The school held its third Foundations of Veterinary Business program, a certificate program 100% recommended by previous participants that is designed for practice owners, prospective owners, practice leaders, or hospital administrators. 

The school held its 43rd annual Gerald V. Ling Veterinary Intern and Resident Research Synopsium (VIRRS), a day-long event featuring short presentations about research findings from house officers to faculty, students, staff, fellow house officers, and guests. 
 

Innovating in Research

The school continued to innovate in animal health through research, including a strategy to engineer new tissue for dogs with joint injuries, a technique to predict for the life-threatening bacterial disease leptospirosis in dogs through use of AI, expanding the functionality of a user-friendly platform called Disease BioPortal to safeguard animal health and prevent infectious disease outbreaks on farms, and a project to reduce the need for antibiotics in pig production by improving intestinal resilience in developing piglets. As feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) remains the leading cause of death in young cats, studies to find readily accessible FIP treatments are being led by UC Davis veterinarians, accompanied by new clinical trials.

The school also shed new light into human health, through findings revealing how the mammalian ovarian reserve is established, equine research highlighting the relation between an epileptic syndrome in Egyptian Arabian foals and one found in infants, and a study examining dogs with lung cancer revealing that the protein interleukin-15 could become a new immunotherapy drug for treating cancer

The school also continued to seek to understand and address issues with the environment and wildlife, repopulating the Shoshone Spring marsh with Amargosa voles, devising a new noninvasive genetic sampling technique for small animals, studying the dangerous climate effects on California hummingbirds, and examining how cats injured in wildfires have increased risk of deadly blood clots and how this relates to the impact of wildfires on human cardiovascular health

The school received funding to investigate important research questions. UC Davis was awarded a 4-year $1 million grant to leverage social media, disease modeling, and extension to improve preparation and response to Virulent Newcastle Disease, the chicken equivalent to Ebola (highly contagious, morbidity over 70 percent). As part of a larger project designed to improve antibiotic stewardship, the school received a $1.5 million cooperative agreement award from the FDA to fund research identifying diseases that drive most use of antibiotics in 3 major livestock species (chicken, swine, cattle) and identify antimicrobial alternatives. The Vector Genetics Laboratory received a $10.2 million grant from Open Philanthropy to support research on human malaria in the west African island nation of São Tomé and Príncipe (STP).
 

Inspiring Care 

2022 was a year of many inspiring stories of care, from the story of exotics specialists and oncologists teaming up to help 4-year-old male green iguana Ragoth battle cancer, to the story of Lillipad, an 11-year-old thoroughbred mare who survived a severe case of life-threatening pneumonia while expecting a foal, recovering fully thanks to the dedicated care of the Equine Service and delivering a healthy filly after a quick and uncomplicated birth. 

Domestic shorthair kitten Rupert was rescued and brought to UC Davis by Nikki Saunders, RVT, following a social media post in her neighborhood about a stray kitten that was near death. Once he was stabilized and hospitalized for the night, the Accessible Veterinary Care Program took over his case. OKP took over his care and orthopedic surgeons through the Fracture Program were consulted about his broken femurs and pelvis. After receiving care, Saunders took over Rupert’s fostering duties- and fell in love with him, providing him a forever home.  

Thanks to clinical trials at the UC Davis veterinary hospital, 9-month-old female Bengal cat Lily showed resolution in all clinical signs of feline infectious peritonitis (FIP). Previous research conducted by Professor Emeritus Niels Pederson uncovered several promising treatments for this disease, including the antiviral drug GS-441524, which however is not readily available in the US. The trial Lily participated in investigated the safety and efficacy of remdesivir, which is similar to GS-441524. She made improvements every day- initially she weighed 2.6 pounds at 3 months old, but by the end of the trial she weighed 7.3 pounds. After the final recheck appointment, she was bright and happy with no signs of FIP in her system. 

 

2021 Year in Review

2021 was a big year for the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine. We ranked first in the nation again, saw some big leadership changes, and received a major gift of Templeton Farms to close out the year. But that’s just the tip of it! Let’s recap:

Leadership Changes and Accomplishments

The school welcomed Mark Stetter as the new dean. He succeeded Michael Lairmore, who stepped down after two five-year terms. Between their tenures, John Pascoe filled in as interim deanJoshua Stern become the new chief veterinary medical officer, while Woutrina Smith became the associate dean for global programs and Lee Ann Jensen became the assistant dean of advancement.

Chief Veterinary Medical Officer Jane SykesAssociate Dean for Global Programs Pat ConradEquine Medical Director Rick Arthur, and others stepped down or retired.

As usual, faculty and students were recognized with numerous awards, which are summarized in the spring and fall issues of Synergy magazine. No news was bigger than Christine Kreuder-Johnson being elected to the National Academy of Medicine. Jonna Mazet was named UC Davis vice provost for grand challenges. Student Ruth Goins was elected president of Veterinarians as One Inclusive Community for Empowerment (VOICE), a national, student-led organization promoting diversity.

Meeting the need

The California Animal Health Food Safety Lab System protected our food supply, detecting low-pathogenic avian influenza in two commercial bird operations. Thanks to teamwork between the Lab System, California Department of Food and Agriculture, and the National Veterinary Services Laboratories, this outbreak was detected and through quick action is now in a surveillance phase. The Lab System is also testing for avian influenza in wild birds in the Pacific Flyway to monitor which strains are circulating in California.

The Lab System also diagnosed the CoVID virus in gorillas and a snow leoparddetected and tracked Rabbit Hemorrhagic Disease, and detected and helped prevent numerous other diseases of potential threat of spread.

The Veterinary Emergency Response Team (VERT), Wildlife Disaster Network and hospital provided assistance during wildfires, including the Tamarack, Dixie, Cache and Caldor Fires.

The Oiled Wildlife Care Network responded to two oil spills, one in Toro Canyon Creek near Santa Barbara, and another at Huntington Beach that made national headlines.

The State of California provided support to expand UC Davis’ veterinary disaster response leadership, creating the California Veterinary Emergency Team. Senator Steven Glazer, Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry, and Chancellor Gary May attended the news conference, among other leaders in disaster response.

California also provided $45 million in one-time funds to the school’s Koret Shelter Medicine Program to lead a program to help homeless animals. The funding increase reflects the governor’s commitment to providing resources that can help communities realize the state’s long-held policy that “no adoptable or treatable animal should be euthanized.” Separately, the state also provided $1 million in ongoing funding to help combat invasive mosquitoes and arboviruses.

In the face of hate and tragedy, the school expressed support for the Asian American and Pacific Islander communities. A social media campaign that provides the perspectives of alumni from diverse backgrounds featured Ann-si Li and Don Jones. The Community Council, formed in 2020, identified three key areas of focus for which subcommittees are producing recommendations. The areas include Diversity, Equity & Inclusion; Community Engagement & Outreach; and Mental Health & Wellness.

The school also managed the effects of the pandemic while providing national leadership on addressing it. As other veterinary practices reduced their services, the hospital took in an increased caseload, estimated to be more than 52,000 total for the year. The hospital also received a rating as the highest level of quality from the American Animal Hospital Association. In addition, the NCI renewed the Comparative Oncology Program as part of its “Comprehensive” Cancer Center Designation renewal.

The Veterinary Genetics Lab also increased their service when demand skyrocketed during the pandemic. They conducted approximately 400,000 tests in 2021—a 23.6% increase from 2020. Despite the increase, the lab maintained the highest level that can be achieved by a testing lab, as affirmed by the American National Standards Institute National Accreditation Board.

In the midst of the pandemic, with faculty support students increased their support for vulnerable populations by opening the Davis Pet Advocacy and Wellness (PAW) Clinic to serve pets of the homeless in Davis. The students also continued to provide veterinary services to the public at the Mercer Clinic for Pets of the Homeless in Sacramento and at the Knights Landing One Health Center.

Serving the profession

Thanks to donors and holding tuition steady, UC Davis retained its lead in providing value to veterinary students.

Taking the proper precautions, the school was also to return to in-person events and said congratulations in an outdoor commencement ceremony for the Class of 2021. The school welcomed the Class of 2025 in a White Coat Ceremony held in the Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts. The video has been watched nearly 50,000 times!

The school served more than 1,500 professionals through its continuing education program and, in partnership with the Graduate School of Management, held its second Foundations of Veterinary Business program, and its inaugural National Veterinary Innovation Academy.

In addition, donations allowed the school to increase the nation’s largest house officer program, now standing at 127 positions in 39 advanced training disciplines.

Moving health forward

Thanks to our donors, the Veterinary Medical Center transition continued to progress, with ground breaking on the new All Species Imaging Center among other progressions, such as the renovation of the ER/Intensive Care Unit Space. In addition, demolition occurred to clear space for a new surgery center.

The school continued to innovate in animal health, such as through personalized medicine for cats with heart diseasepioneering 3D minimally invasive surgery, and equine PET Scan technology, which is now assisting sporthorses. A more complete summary of clinical innovations can be found in the spring and fallissues of Synergy magazine.

The school also influenced human health in 2021, with the renewal of the school’s comparative medicine program with the UC Davis Health Comprehensive Cancer Center, a procedure first performed on canines leading to the world’s first human spina bifida clinical trial, a breakthrough in understanding chlamydia that could lead to a vaccineresearch using gene drives to control malaria, research linking air quality to an increased risk of Alzheimer’s, identification of a canine genetic mutation that is linked to a neurological disease in humans, and, of course, breakthroughs in understanding COVID-19 and related diseases.

The school also continued to help understand and address issues with the environment and wildlife, such as a new system for detecting wildlife illness and death, understanding marine toxins and fungal spreadprotecting mountain gorillas and their habitataddressing plastic pollution, and smoke toxicity.

A more complete summary of discoveries can be found in the spring and fall issues of Synergy magazine.

Farewell to Pint

The school also inspired the world through activities like bringing the Salish Sea to fifth graders or by sharing how life is “super amazing” through the story of Chonk the axolotl. In addition, what may be UC Davis’ most famous patient ever, Kabang, made international news again after passing away peacefully in May and being honored with a new statue.

Near the end of the year, a whole football stadium was inspired by the celebration to honor Pint, the “Wonder Dog,” who had been retrieving the UC Davis football kickoff tee since 2012. For a moment, Pint and the dedication of his owner, Dr. Danika Bannasch, represented the triumph of persistence and spirit to a university community that has been enduring the travails of a global pandemic. Surely, Pint deserved every bit of attention he received.

2020 Year in Review

#1 in QS World University Rankings for Veterinary Science - The School of Veterinary Medicine was recognized with the top spot in veterinary science in the QS World University Rankings.

Data showed UC Davis to be the best value in veterinary education.

Reaffirmed our commitment to social justice with the creation of a Community Council to promote diversity and inclusion.

Our emergency room treated a record number of cases — with some months seeing a 65% increase in caseload. Success stories include:

  • Miro, a 5-year-old German shepherd who worked as a patrol dog in the CA State Parks, recovered from myasthenia gravis thanks to a novel clinical trial using stem cell treatments.
  • Daisy, an 8-year-old female collie/terrier mix, with acute kidney injury who was saved with dialysis.
  • Ned, a semi-feral cat who was rescued after the LNU Lightning Complex Fire was finally discharged after being hospitalized for three months.
  • Emma, a tiny orphan kitten, was saved thanks to the efforts of a local university patron, four veterinary hospital services, a veterinary resident, a newly graduated Animal Science major, and dozens of faculty, staff, and student caregivers.

Unveiled the new Feline Treatment and Housing Suite as part of Phase I of the future Veterinary Medical Center.

Secured funding to investigate viral spillover through the launch of a new research center — the EpiCenter for Emerging Infectious Disease Intelligence.

The Center for Equine Health pioneered the 100 Horse Project, which will perform whole-genome sequencing of 100 horses.

Researchers licensed a new vaccine to prevent a deadly cattle disease and help California ranchers save millions of dollars.

The Veterinary Emergency Response Team responded to a record-breaking wildfire season, examining and treating more than 1,200 animals in the field while the UC Davis veterinary hospital cared for an additional 60 animals in critical condition.

We also established the Wildlife Disaster Network to aid wildlife injured in natural disasters.

Students expanded the Mercer Clinic for Pets of the Homeless with the PAW Clinic that provides veterinary care to the underserved.

Virtual Commencement and Diploma Drive-Through—During the midst of a global pandemic, the UC Davis veterinary medicine community held a virtual 69th Commencement Ceremony on May 22nd to honor 147 DVM graduates while observing physical distancing guidelines. 

Organized and hosted the inaugural SVM Research Expo held on May 5, which was transitioned to a virtual event focused on resources for COVID-19 research available to SVM researchers. Approximately 210 faculty, staff and students participated.

Leading Innovation—The National Institute of General Medical Sciences (T32 GM136559) approved funding for the first DVM/PhD Medical Scientist Training Program in the country.

The Veterinary Genetics Laboratory launched an updated and advanced website along with several new DNA tests for the veterinary community.

In total, $85,086,683 has been raised for the Veterinary Medical Center Campaign. Fundraising for the All Species Imaging Center is complete, and planning is moving forward.

The SVM Communications team launched Synergy, a new magazine published twice a year, to highlight feature stories, research breakthroughs, clinical advances and accomplishments of our vet med community. 

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2019 Year in Review

The UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine passed accreditation from the American Veterinary Medical Association with flying colors and continued to be ranked #1 by US News & World Report and #2 world-wide by QS World Rankings. 

The school’s annual research budget continued to increase with approximately $80.7 million in research funding for the 2017-2018 year. 

Veterinary Medical Center progress—a matching fund for the All Species Imaging Center was established and the large animal support facility is nearly ready for move-in. The fundraising total to date is approximately $106.2 million.

Donors to the school continue to make a major impact on all aspects of the school’s mission to lead veterinary medicine and address societal needs. A few highlights from the past fiscal year include: 

  • $9M Estate gift to advance feline research and care
  • $1.5M Gift for feline care and disaster preparedness
  • $500k Gift to fund a clinical trials staff support position
  • $2.3M Estate gift to fund an Endowed Chair

The outbreak of virulent Newcastle disease in California poultry this past year underscores the important role that the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System plays to protect animal and human health in the state. The CAHFS team has led diagnostics nationally, while protecting California locally. 

The school achieved another milestone in clinical equine imaging with the first successful use
of positron emission tomography (PET) on a standing horse. Equine PET, pioneered at UC Davis with the first horse imaged in April 2015, has until now required patients to be under general anesthesia.

Michael Lairmore, D.V.M., dean of the University of California, Davis, School of Veterinary Medicine, was appointed president of the Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges (AAVMC). Lairmore, a veterinarian and scientist who is a member of the prestigious National Academy of Medicine, will serve a one-year term through March, 2020.

Summer Veterinary Business Certificate Program—The School of Veterinary Medicine and Graduate School of Management jointly launched a new Foundations of Veterinary Business program. It will provide a cost-effective and time efficient opportunity to develop a solid business foundation and practical skills required to manage and lead successful veterinary practices.

Drs. Isaac Pessah and Dr. Philip Kass were elected as fellows to the American Association of the Advancement of Science. They were two of only seven veterinarians selected.

Dr. Beatriz Martínez López was selected as a 2018-2019 Chancellor’s Fellow—one of only 10 at UC Davis.

Students received more than $7.2 million in support this year, thanks to the generosity of individual, association and corporate donors.

The One Health Institute launched the Rx One Health Summer Institute for its third year, providing an intensive One Health field experience short course in Tanzania for graduate students and early career professionals from 9 countries.

VMTH & Advancement Communications launched a new internal monthly newsletter, the VMTH Voice, that highlights staff and clinician achievements, promotes the cultural beliefs considered core to the hospital, and provides updates on the Veterinary Medical Center.

The Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center co-hosted the 68th International Wildlife Disease Association (WDA) Conference in Tahoe City in July with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. The largest WDA conference ever in North America, the event brought together more than 400 veterinarians, wildlife professionals, public health specialists, government and industry experts, and students interested in wildlife health, conservation and management.

The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) recently released the 2019 Economic State of the Veterinary Profession and the data shows UC Davis to be the best value in veterinary education.

USAID Award Supports New $85M Project—The U.S. Agency for International Development will award up to $85 million over the next five years to the University of California, Davis’ One Health Institute and consortium partners to implement the One Health Workforce—Next Generation project.

Professor Nicole Baumgarth was one of 10 UC Davis professors elected as fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

A $50,000 Anonymous Donation in November 2019 secured a PRISMAX hemodialysis machine, the next generation of acute care technology in Hemodialysis and Blood Purification. The acquisition makes UC Davis the only veterinary school in the nation with this high-tech piece
of equipment.

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2018 Year in Review

#1 in QS World University Rankings for Veterinary Science - The School of Veterinary Medicine was recognized with the top spot in veterinary science in the 2018 QS World University Rankings for the fourth consecutive year.

Leader in Transdisciplinary Research—The school’s $85 million high-impact transdisciplinary research budget funds a research enterprise larger than any other veterinary schools by more than $30 million.

UC Davis Veterinary Hospital Treated More Than 50k Patients. Success stories include:

  • a complete hip replacement on a champion show dog
  • a laceration repair surgery that saved a horse’s athletic career
  • identifying genetic causes of glaucoma in cocker spaniels
  • development of immunotherapy in dogs that will lead to human clinical trials.
  • Extended leadership in clinical education with new fellowships in nephrology and extracorporeal therapies.

UC Davis Becomes Only Veterinary Hospital in The World with a Volumetric Pet Scanner— UC Davis veterinary hospital started imaging patients on a new PET/CT scanner known as the Mini Explorer II. This advanced imaging system, the first of its kind in the world, is designed to provide veterinarians with both anatomic and physiologic information.

Innovative Care—Dr. Jamie Peyton’s innovative use of tilapia fish skin to treat burn wounds in wildlife led to her being called upon to assist a seriously burned pony in the U.K.

Fighting Virulent Newcastle Disease in California—Following the initial detection of virulent Newcastle disease (vND) through a routine submission to the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratories (CAHFS), which was confirmed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) on May 16, 2018, CAHFS continued working with the California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA), USDA and poultry owners to contain and eradicate this foreign animal disease.

Leading One Health through the following activities:

  • Launched the Global Virome Project—a 10-year effort to identify most viruses with potential to cause disease in humans.
  • Reduced pandemic risk globally through PREDICT training of more than 4,000 professionals world-wide.
  • Established the Planetary Health Center of Expertise through the UC Global Health Institute with Dr. Woutrina Smith serving as co-director.

International Expertise in Food Animal Safety—The Center for Animal Disease Modeling and Surveillance (CADMS) led by Dr. Beatriz Martínez López was formally recognized by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations as an FAO Reference Center for Veterinary Epidemiology.

UC President Napolitano Visited Vet Med—UC President Janet Napolitano stopped by for a visit and tour. The school’s leadership team provide an update for President Napolitano on program priorities and activities in support of animal, human and environmental health. Following a brief overview in Gladys Valley Hall, the heart of the school’s didactic teaching space, Dean Michael Lairmore and Dr. Jane Sykes, chief veterinary medical officer of the VMTH, toured Napolitano through the hospital.

Vet-For-A-Day—24 Davis High School students interested in veterinary medicine participated in Vet-for-a-Day, an outreach effort hosted by the school. This was the second in a two-part program put on this year by faculty and staff to engage younger students on the potential career options available in veterinary medicine.

Dr. Gregory Ferraro Endowed Directorship Announced—Dr. Gregory Ferraro was honored for his lasting impact on equine health and research with the announcement of a new endowed directorship in his name. Dean Michael Lairmore appointed Dr. Carrie Finno as the inaugural holder.

Veterinary Center for Clinical Trials—The Veterinary Center for Clinical Trials worked with faculty and collaborators across the campus to facilitate more than 70 active clinical trials aimed at advancing medical care for veterinary patients in a variety of disciplines.

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2017 Year in Review

#1 in Qs World University Rankings for Veterinary Science - The School of Veterinary Medicine was recognized with the top spot in veterinary science in the 2017 QS World University Rankings for the third consecutive year.

PREDICT Builds Virus Surveillance Capacity in 30 Countries—the $175 million USAID multi-institutional program led by the school’s One Health Institute has to-date:

  • trained 3,300 government personnel, physicians, veterinarians, lab techs and students in biosafety, surveillance, lab techniques and disease outbreak investigations;
  • sampled 74,000+ at-risk people, livestock and wildlife at human-animal interfaces with high-risk and opportunity for viral spillover;
  • detected 1,000+ unique viruses in animals and humans; 820 novel viruses and 182 known viruses (including Ebola and SARS); and
  • developed low-cost methods for detecting viral threats with 60 labs in 30 countries around the world.

Veterinary Medical Center Campaign - Leading the Way - Chancellor Gary May and Dean Michael Lairmore announced plans to raise $115 million in philanthropic support for the first phase in the long-term plan to transform the hospital, which sees more than 50,000 patients annually, into the comprehensive UC Davis Veterinary Medical Center.

Novel Cancer Strategy may help Dogs and Humans – In collaboration with the UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center, the school’s Center for Companion Animal Health developed a unique immune therapy strategy to advance a novel cancer treatment for animals and humans. Having successfully shrunk the metastatic lung cancer in CCAH dog patients, the strategy will enter clinical trials in humans at Davis.

Unraveling Genetics of Disc Disease in Dogs - Researchers discovered that dogs with intervertebral disc disease (IVDD) are 50 times more likely to have a genetic mutation responsible for chondrodystrophy (the skeletal disorder leading to shorter legs and abnormal intervertebral discs).

Newly Elected AAAS Fellows add Honor to the School – Drs. Patricia A. Conrad, Jonna A. Mazet, and Stephen J. McSorley were elected Fellows in the prestigious American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).

3D Printed Mask Serves as Cast for Fractured Dog Skull - The Dentistry and Oral Surgery Service collaborated with biomedical medical engineering students to develop a new face mask – the Exo-K9 Exoskeleton. This custom, 3D printed exoskeleton for dogs with maxillomandibular injuries was used to successfully treat a challenging case with multiple fractures.

MPVM Celebrates 50 Years of Global Impacts - The Masters in Preventive Veterinary Medicine (MPVM) program celebrated its 50th Anniversary. Established in 1967, the program has trained more than 1,000 graduates who have held top-level governmental, private industry, academic and practice positions in the U.S. and 86 other countries.

Staff Innovation Helps Horses - Hospital technician Jason Peters, RVT, RLAT created a new state-of-the-art large animal CT table to improve how scans on horses are performed.

International Society for Anthrozoology Conference - The school hosted the 3-day conference on human-animal interconnections which featured a broad range of speakers on topics such as: killer whales-the human impact; one world one health in the dry half of the world; human-animal bond interactions; and dog-assisted intervention in schools for children with special needs.

Vet Med Student Services and Administration Center Opens – This new facility, housing 100 staff and school leaders, is a major piece of the masterplan to co-locate the school’s programs at the Health Sciences District.

Bone Regrowth Stimulator - The Orthopedic Surgery Service successfully implemented the use of a bone growth stimulator to repair bone injuries in dogs with nonunion fractures in their limbs where the bone had failed to re-unite despite previous surgical attempts.

Genetics Unravel Clues to Gliomas – Drs. Danika Bannasch and Peter Dickinson joined a team with two Swedish scientists that used genome mapping across 25 dog breeds to identify three candidate genes associated with glioma development in canines. The study may provide insights into how these often untreatable brain tumors form in dogs and possibly in humans.

Wildfire Disaster Response – The school’s teams helped rescue and save animals injured and/or displaced by the California wildfires that ravaged much of the Napa Valley area--performing search and rescue missions in the fire zones, aiding at evacuation centers, and caring for hospitalized animals. In total, 29 veterinarians and students assisted displaced animals in the fire zones while the veterinary hospital received and treated 77 animals including 33 koi fish.

STAR Program – Forty-three students participated in the STAR (Students Training in Advanced Research) Program. Guided by faculty mentors, veterinary students are exposed to research aspects including: scientific dialogue and communication; literature search and research; laboratory conduct and professionalism; research ethics and bioethics; mentorship; grantsmanship; self-education; and critical review and assessment.

Fundraising Efforts Reach Record Levels – The school’s Development Team worked with school leaders, faculty, donors, alumni and friends to raise a total of $55.5 Million for academic year 2016-17.

Spay Day Returns - After an absence of six years, the school participated in National Spay Day with the Sacramento Area Animal Coalition spaying 64 large breed dogs from low income participants in the community.

Resident Research Training - The 39th Annual Gerald V. Ling House Officer Seminar Day featured research presentations by 47 hospital house officers covering a wide array of topics including chemotherapy treatments, cone beam CT technology, ultrasound-guided stem cell administration and 3D printing for surgical planning.

Teaching Academies Foster Best Practices – Faculty participating in both the regional and local teaching academies engaged in multiple activities aimed at understanding different teaching methodologies and learning styles of today’s students to promote an outstanding educational environment.

Advancing Blood Purification Procedures - The Blood Purification and Hemodialysis Unit, continued to advance the use of therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) as a state-of-the-art blood purification procedure.

Scholarship Support for Students - At the annual Evening of Gratitude event, scholarship donors and student recipients celebrated their mutual dedication and investment in advancing animal health. This year $6.7 million in total support was provided to students - $2.5 million in gifts and endowments and $4.2 million in grants.

Efforts to Engage Future Veterinarians – The school supported a variety of pre-veterinary outreach efforts to introduce junior high through college level students to veterinary medicine including:

  • Summer Enrichment Program - a 5-week intensive program designed to help 10 college level disadvantaged students. Students rotated through eight hospital services, attended lectures and study sessions with veterinary students on GRE materials, and participated in admissions workshops.
  • COSMOS – the California State Summer School for Mathematics and Science (COSMOS) biomedical sciences cluster (veterinary and human medicine emphasis) is the most highly applied COSMOS program on all four UC campuses. Forty high school students learned from faculty and veterinary students on topics such as radiology, comparative anatomy, and pathology. Over the last 14 years, 10 COSMOS participants have earned DVM degrees and more are currently enrolled.
  • Vet-For-A-Day - thirty-two Davis High School students participated in a career pathway experience which included lectures, classroom demos and behind the scenes tours of veterinary facilities.
  • SMASH Pathways - is a free summer program for 8th-graders to help them be competitive in science, technology, engineering and math. Twenty-five students were introduced to veterinary medicine in the areas of: anatomy, radiology and x-ray reading, using a microscope, understanding cancer, an introduction to surgery and a suturing lab.

Stem Cell Treatment for Spina Bifida Helps Dogs and Children - A pair of English bulldog puppies born with spina bifida are the first patients to be successfully treated with a unique therapy—a combination of surgery and stem cells—developed by a team of UC Davis veterinary and human medicine researchers and clinicians.

Picnic Day – The school’s Picnic Day events included hospital tours, demonstrations and informational booths for more than 500 visitors.

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2016 Year in Review

UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine ranked No. 1 in world again by the QS World University Rankings.

Top stories for 2016 include:

Dr. Jane Sykes named the first woman Chief Veterinary Medical Officer of the William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital.

The Alex A. Ardans Tulare Branch Laboratory of the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System was officially dedicated Friday, October 28, 2016- honoring the outstanding contributions of the former director and long-time faculty member, an expert in the field of veterinary diagnostics.

A novel stem cell therapy developed by school faculty to treat feline chronic gingivostomatitis (FCGS) is also providing hope for humans. The oral disease in cats is analogous to oral lichen planus in humans , leading collaborators to seek grant funds to pursue human clinical trials.

The school’s robust research programs are the highest funded in the nation with $75,747,241—twenty five percent of which is funded by NIH for human-health related studies.

Veterinary professor Robert Brosnan developed patent-pending technology in hopes of discovering safer, and more cost-effective general anesthetics for both animals and people. He’s now working with a biomedical startup company that has raised more than $1 million toward revolutionizing anesthesia.

The veterinary hospital became the first veterinary facility in the world to acquire a positron emission tomography (PET) scanner and utilize this technology for equine patients. PET has shown to be the most sensitive technique to detect stress remodeling lesions, particularly in the fetlock and the carpus.

The school initiates planning for the future veterinary medical center—a visionary complex designed to promote an integrated, state-of-the-art approach to patient care and training for the brightest veterinary students and clinical specialists.

A new drug undergoing clinical trials by veterinary cardiologist Joshua Stern for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is showing great promise for treating heart disease in cats and humans.

Third-year student Hannah Laurence completed a year-long program as a Howard Hughes Medical Institute fellow. The biomedical research study she participated in made discoveries related to the Zika virus and was published in the journal Science.

Researchers confirmed that α-tocopherol deficiency (a component of vitamin E) can lead to significant neurologic problems and issues in the horse’s eye, specifically the retina.

The J.D. Wheat Veterinary Orthopedic Research Laboratory team has discovered that the majority of catastrophic racing and training bone fractures and joint injuries have pre-existing bone remodeling or stress fractures at the site of their fatal injury--meaning, catastrophic injuries are preventable.

Teddy, a 19-year-old Thoroughbred horse, was awarded an honorary veterinary degree by the graduating class of 2016 for being a “master equine educator.” Dr. Teddy has helped the students learn equine health at more than two dozen appointments and a lengthy stay at the veterinary hospital.

The veterinary hospital team, using advanced equipment, techniques and facilities, continues to advance its minimally invasive surgery capabilities --opening up an entirely new area of medicine.

After more than 50 years of research, the tick-borne bacterium responsible for “foothill abortion disease,” one of the most devastating cattle diseases in the Western United States, has been named and genetically characterized by school researchers as “Pajaroellobacter abortibovis.”

Students and researchers at the Pastured Poultry Farm study pasture chicken production including the use of a student-built Eggmobile “coop on wheels,” that moves around the land for consistent fertilization. In addition to research and educational programs, about 800 eggs are produced each week that are donated to Yolo County Food Bank for community support.

School faculty are combating antibiotic resistance through enhanced education of students and practitioners on the proper use of antibiotics in animals raised for food, and by working with human and animal health stakeholders, food companies and retailers to identify ways to slow the emergence of resistant bacteria.

The school hosted this year’s International Renal Interest Society (IRIS) Renal Week, an internationally recognized nephrology conference that features topical issues in renal medicine presented by world leaders in the field.

Veterinary and medical students team up to offer monthly clinics for the animals and people of Knights Landing and Robbins, two small rural communities in Yolo County. The clinics, located across the street from each other, provide the community with health care services and inform the students about health topics that impact both people and their pets.

A consortium of researchers led by the school’s Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center has determined that coastal waters near heavy human development are more likely to receive land based “pathogen pollution,” which can include viruses, bacteria and parasites. Human-driven changes can increase or reduce pathogen runoff.

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2015 Year in Review

School ranked #1 in World by QS World University Rankings and in nation by U.S. News and World Report Graduate School Rankings.

Seven of the UC Davis Top Ten Stories for 2015 featured the School of Veterinary Medicine:

#1 - Newborn horses may offer clues to autism
#3 - Lyme disease subverts immune system, prevents future protection
#4 - Rat poison at marijuana farms killing rare forest mammal
#5 - Plastic for Dinner: fish contain human-made debris
#6 - Hummingbird Health: Appreciating the Little Things
#7 – Wildlife Experience High Price of Oil
#8 - Molly the Cow Rescue from mine shaft

In response to the Valley & Butte fires, the school provided emergency response assistance in the field and around-the-clock-care for animal victims referred to the clinic for burn treatments.

Leading the multi-institutional USAID funded PREDICT program, school veterinarians and researchers continue to identify new viruses in hot spots around the globe. To date more than 800 new animal viruses have been identified, and 100 of the potentially “risky” ones have been sent back to the U.S for further study. The goal of PREDICT is to prevent and control pandemic diseases such as Ebola.

In anticipation of the new FDA guidelines (effective 1/1/17)related to antibiotic use in livestock, the school partnered with the Farm Foundation to bring together 75 key livestock and poultry producers, feed suppliers, veterinarians, faculty leaders and extension specialist to discuss best practices for the use of antibiotics in livestock. Workshop participants discussed the challenges, resources and increased veterinary participation in the implementation of these new guidelines.

The school’s Koret Shelter Medicine Program is a co-founder of the Million Cat Challenge. Launched in 2014, the challenge’s goal is to save 1 million cats at participating shelters nationwide through disease prevention, education, managing the flow of cats into the shelters and promoting increased adoption. More than 400,000 lives have already been saved.

Researchers at the school have developed an experimental vaccine shown to be effective in preventing foothill abortion, an endemic disease affecting cattle in California, Oregon and Nevada. Expanded clinical trials move the vaccine one step closer to bringing relief to cattle producers experiencing significant losses each year.

Veterinary cardiologist places state-of-the art pacemaker made especially for dogs in patient allowing dog to return to normal activity. Cardiology team collaborates with human cardiologists for lifesaving heart surgery on cat with rare heart defect. This is just one example of the One Health approach embraced by the school’s faculty for improved animal, human and environmental health.

More than 600 students, researchers and scholars attended this year’s Merial-NIH National Veterinary Scholar Symposium hosted by the school. The theme, “Solving Complex Challenges at the Interface of Humans, Animals and their Environment,” was supported through engaging speakers, poster sessions, discussion opportunities, and highlighted by keynote speaker Nobel Laureate Peter Doherty.

In this year of tremendous loss in Midwest chicken populations due to avian influenza, school poultry experts and diagnostic pathologists worked closely with backyard, small farm and commercial poultry producers to prevent disease outbreaks. Through early disease detection, early surveillance and strong biosecurity practices, California was able to limit the spread of avian influenza.

More and more companion animals aid scientists’ search for human health solutions. A collaborative team of veterinarians, human doctors and biomedical engineers have had numerous successes in regenerative cures by working together. The reconstruction of mandibular (jaw) bone, a novel procedure just a few years ago, is now routine at the veterinary hospital.

The Western Institute for Food Safety and Security leads efforts to develop food safety training programs and a joint One Health Center for Food Safety with the Nanjing Agricultural University (NAU) in China. In January, Chinese undergraduates traveled to Davis for a 3-week conference. In April, a group of faculty from both institutions discussed food safety, opportunities for research and graduate educational exchanges between NAU and UC Davis. In November, a group of Davis faculty members and leaders traveled to Nanjing for a conference focused on issues related to antibiotic use in animal agriculture. In December, Chinese animal science and veterinary faculty participated in an intensive 3-week program on the One Health approach to food safety.

Students tell their stories of their externships and learning experiences in their own words to inspire others to follow in their footsteps. From Thailand, Chile, Sacramento and Uganda, DVM Stories – a new blog launched by the school – provides a window into the student experience.

The new Interventional Surgery suite opens at the veterinary hospital, elevating the soft tissue surgery capabilities, quality and effectiveness. UC Davis has the largest interventional radiology caseload of any teaching hospital.

Gorilla Doctors, a partnership between the school’s Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center and the nonprofit Mt. Gorilla Project, has provided the opportunity to gain new insights into the impact of population decline and clues as to how apes and humans adapt genetically to living in small populations.

The Health Sciences Advanced Imaging Facility opens with new cutting-edge imaging tools to advance health research. The high resolution confocal microscopes allow investigators to optically dissect a complex specimen as a whole without having to physically cut it – a huge benefit.

A 13-year study of mountain lion fatalities in S. California confirms that humans are the biggest threat to the large cats. Most were killed through vehicle collisions, public-safety removals or human-caused wildfires. With the urban encroachment into their natural habitat, mountain lions must travel across Interstate highway I-15, and into populated areas to pursue their natural breeding patterns – nature’s way of maintaining genetic diversity.

The students’ AVMF "Oath in Action" project tied for #1 place. The student-organized annual Adopt-a-thon which drew approximately 1,000 people and featured 37 booths was recognized by the American Veterinary Medical Foundation. The program encourages members of the profession to give back to their communities outside the walls of the veterinary hospital.

The veterinary hospital opens the Healthy Nutrition and Wellness Clinic to develop nutritional management plans to help with the growing number of overweight pets. Obesity in dogs and cats contributes to the development of diabetes, heart and lung disease, exercise or heat intolerance and other health issues.

The school’s veterinary hospital was featured on the national TV show “Jeopardy” twice. A total of 15 clues were filmed, the first five clues were aired 10/21/15 under the category "Veterinary Medicine." The second five clues aired 1/12/16 under the category "Horse Health.” The additional five clues will be used individually during the show’s normal season.

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2014 Year in Review

When the Ebola crisis hit countries in West Africa, veterinary medicine researchers from the school headed to the frontline. They served a critical role by conducting laboratory testing to identify cases so that rapid tracing of patient-contacts could begin, thereby reducing the transmission of the disease. These researchers, graduates of the Veterinary Scientist Training Program, have the joint skillset of a DVM and PhD—making them invaluable in situations like this Ebola outbreak where emerging and zoonotic diseases can have such a devastating impact.

UC Davis leads the nation’s veterinary schools with $74 million in research funding for the fiscal year 2013-2014. Many research findings can be translated from veterinary medicine to human medicine, such as discovering the genetics of cleft palate in a particular dog breed that will aid in understanding this human birth defect. Melanoma treatment in dogs also holds hope for human patients.

Many faculty members were recognized for their contributions and expertise including:

Students for One Health joined with School of Medicine students to provide monthly basic veterinary care for pets of an underserved agricultural population at the Knights Landing Clinic.

The school successfully achieved an ambitious goal of raising $160 million in philanthropic gifts as part of The Campaign for UC Davis, an 8-year comprehensive fundraising effort. More than half of this total— over $80 million—was directed to research and program support, and nearly $32 million went to help students.

Shelter medicine was recognized as a veterinary specialty by the American Veterinary Medical Association board—thanks in large part to the dedicated efforts of Kate Hurley, associate director of the UC Davis Koret Shelter Medicine Program.

The school’s One Health approach is highlighted by the PREDICT program—a project of the One Health Institute that received a $100 M grant from USAID to continue the work of preventing pandemics.

A novel theriogeniology residency was added to the school’s line-up of resident training opportunities, the largest resident program in the country.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency awarded $800,000 to scientists studying how chemicals interact with biological processes, to better understand the potential health effects of chemical exposures.

UC Davis researchers presented a study representing the largest genetic sampling of mountain lions in Southern California, which supported the concern regarding loss of genetic diversity due to animal populations being cut off from each other by freeways and human development.

Veterinary students won the inaugural Veterinary Innovation Challenge with a clever idea for owners to better care for their pets using smart phone technology.

In a follow-up to a previous study of the effects of neutering, it was discovered that neutering poses more health risks for golden retrievers than Labradors.

Researchers solved a century-old mystery when they determined the survival mechanism for bluetongue virus, a serious disease that annually costs U.S. cattle and sheep industries an estimated $125 million.

Veterinary oral surgeons increased the scope of their novel jawbone regrowth surgeries by successfully performing a nearly complete lower jaw reconstruction in a dog that lost part of her jaw to cancer.

Thanks to surgical techniques developed in a veterinary clinical trial, a veterinary ophthalmologist was able to successfully treat cornea disease in a dog and hopes to discover the gene causing the disease.

As California continues to struggle with ongoing drought, UC Davis’ Western Institute for Food Safety and Security, provided guidance for dairy farmers and ranchers with information on workshops, assistance application sessions and on-line resources. The California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory system published a special report on drought-related feed toxicity to build public awareness of this health risk.

The California Raptor Center released a young, female golden eagle after more than eight months of treatment and rehabilitation for a novel mite infestation, first identified by UC Davis veterinary epidemiologists.

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2013 Year in Review

A national leader in veterinary research, the school celebrated the opening of Veterinary Medicine 3B—a leading-edge biomedical research facility dedicated to a variety of issues such as environmental pollution, food safety, public health, and infectious diseases, including those that can be passed between animals and humans. UC Davis leads the nation’s 28 veterinary schools with $67.2 million in research funding for the fiscal year 2012-2013.

The Veterinary Center for Clinical Trials launched to accelerate identification and development of diagnostics and therapeutics for the benefit of veterinary and human patients. More than 40 clinical trials are now in progress.

Leigh Griffiths, assistant professor of cardiology and cardiac surgeon at the school, teamed with three biomedical engineers from the campus to develop a new approach to heart valve replacement— potentially giving transplant patients longer, healthier lives. Their collaboration won the annual Big Bang! Business Plan Competition at the UC Davis Graduate School of Management.

Studies from the newly dedicated Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center discovered the presence of brucellosis in harbor seals and the H1N1 flu strain in elephant seals, increasing the understanding of One Health issues among human, animals and the environment. Years of research by the center also contributed to California’s ban on lead ammunition.

The Western Institute for Food Safety and Security remains on the frontlines of protecting the nation’s food supply thanks to a $10.5 M grant renewal from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the next five years. The center is heavily focused on assisting the FDA with the national implementation of the proposed Produce Safety Rule and part of the Food Safety Modernization Act.

Jonna Mazet, director of the One Health Institute, visited Washington D.C. to lead a White House briefing on PREDICT—a project of USAID’s Emerging Pandemic Threats Program that aims to prevent, detect, and rapidly respond to novel infectious pathogens that can spread from wildlife to humans.

Companion animals continue to receive the most technologically advanced patient care at the William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital with the help of:

  • A new TrueBeam linear accelerator that delivers more powerful cancer treatments with pinpoint accuracy and precision 3-D printing based upon a CT scan that enables dental and oral surgeons to accurately determine the extent and location of an injury or mass, see how close lesions are to vital structures such as the brain, and determine the potential consequences of making an incision into a particular area of the patient’s skull
  • The matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometer—the most advanced diagnostic tool for rapid identification of bacterial and fungal organisms which significantly shortens the time required to initiate patient care/treatment

Veterinary and human surgeons teamed up to perform the first canine laryngectomy to save the life of Bean, a shelter rescue.

FARM Club students won a new portable ultrasound machine thanks to their ingenious music video parody that won first place in a contest.

Faculty launched year three of a new curriculum, built on the foundations of defined learning outcomes, acquiring entry-level clinical skills, problem solving, critical thinking and lifelong learning. Jonna Mazet was elected to the prestigious Institute of Medicine, one of the nation’s highest honors in health and medicine. She is the fourth faculty member from the school to be elected and joins only 17 total IOM veterinary medicine members.

A three-day Donkey Welfare Symposium held at the school drew people from around the globe to learn more about the health and welfare of the world’s leading working animal.

Danika Bannasch was appointed as the inaugural recipient of the Maxine Adler Endowed Chair in Genetics.

The Koret Shelter Medicine Program developed the UC Davis Virtual Consultant, a free online self-evaluation tool for shelter staff, veterinarians, and volunteers world-wide to help improve the well-being of shelter animals.

The school provided 710 scholarships and awards to students amounting to $2 million—more than $200,000 more than last year. The scholarship program is enhanced by the school’s grant program, which provides another $2 million in financial support. More than 90 percent of students receive scholarship or grant funding.

Staff member Harold Davis, manager of the Emergency & Critical Care Service, was selected as the 2013 Western Veterinary Conference Veterinary Technician Continuing Educator of the Year. Davis, who has worked at the VMTH for more than 30 years, is an outstanding example of the dedicated, professional team of staff supporting the clinical service, research and teaching missions of the school.

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2012 Year in Review

The school is awarded full accreditation status by the American Veterinary Medical Association Council on Education.

An international team led by Stephen McSorley of the Center for Comparative Medicine takes an important step toward the development of an effective vaccine against salmonella, a group of increasingly antibiotic-resistant foodborne bacteria that kills hundreds of thousands of people worldwide each year.

Faculty launch the second year of the new curriculum, built on the foundations of defined learning outcomes, acquisition of entry-level clinical skills, problem solving and critical thinking, and lifelong learning.

Veterinary oral surgeons and biomedical engineers prove that an experimental reconstructive procedure can regrow jawbones in dogs that have lost bone to injuries or removal of cancerous tumors. Early success with eight canine patients at the William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital indicates that this valuable data will translate into biomedical treatments in human and veterinary medicine.

Studies from the Center for Children’s Environmental Health regarding the impacts of toxic chemicals on the onset of autism reveal:

  • The first known link between flame retardants and the social, behavioral and learning deficits associated with autism
  • Strong evidence that triclosan, an antibacterial chemical widely used in hand soaps and other personal-care products, is of concern to both human and environmental health
  • A new explanation about how a defective gene causes brain changes that lead to the atypical social behavior characteristic of autism; the research offers a potential target for drugs to treat the condition.
  • Early exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) causes a chain of events that disrupts normal patterns of neuronal connections in the brain; the impairment is a common feature of a number of conditions, including autism spectrum disorders

Faculty, staff and administrators begin to implement the comprehensive Strategic Plan, a 5-year guide for initiatives related to the school’s mission, curriculum, faculty recruitment, research, clinical service, finances and infrastructure that builds on the school’s reputation for leading veterinary medicine and addressing societal needs.

As part of a national, targeted surveillance program, personnel from the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System help identify the fourth case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy to occur in the United States and determine that the animal had the “atypical” form of the disease. This form is not associated with previous BSE outbreaks in humans, and the cow, an older animal, did not enter the food supply.

The school recruits 10 new faculty members with expertise and experience in poultry medicine, equine reproduction, dairy production medicine, veterinary ophthalmology, small animal community medicine and more.

The school initiates a 5-year interagency 100,000 Foodborne Pathogen Genome Project to sequence the genomes of 100,000 infectious microorganisms and speed diagnosis of foodborne diseases. The team, led by Bart Weimer, is developing a public database of salmonella, E. coli and Listeria monocytogenes, as well as common foodborne and waterborne viruses that sicken people and animals.

An enthusiastic student team embarks on a Calvin Schwabe One Health Project by surveying a Nicaraguan community with limited access to medical care and veterinary services. The ongoing task involves assessment of intertwined factors of animal, human and environmental health and promotes cooperation among physicians, veterinarians, environmental specialists and public health professionals to enhance community health.

Ranchers, veterinarians, veterinary students, animal science students and others attend the First Annual Beef Improvement and Low-stress Cattle Handling Seminar. Veterinary experts teach about the science and principles of animal welfare and explain practical tips for low-stress handling, safe use of antibiotics, and facility designs that optimize health and well-being in cattle.

Equine specialist Alonso Guedes, working with a colleague in the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, successfully treats Hulahalla, a young Thoroughbred mare near death from laminitis. The novel anti-inflammatory compound dramatically relieves the animal’s pain until she heals; the researchers plan clinical trials for further study of the drug’s safety and effectiveness.

In its tradition of promoting student diversity and excellence, the Office of Student Programs directs the Summer Enrichment Program for undergraduates, who strengthen academic skills, acquire veterinary experience and become more competitive applicants to veterinary school.

The Companion Avian and Exotic Pet Service introduces the Parrot Wellness & Welfare Program to provide services in preventive medicine, promote client education and perform research to improve the health and welfare of parrots.

Pamela Lein heads up the $17 million CounterACT Center of Excellence, part of an innovative NIH network seeking to develop antidotes that would protect emergency responders, medical professionals and others from intentional or accidental exposure to chemicals that cause neurological damage. Future findings will also help scientists improve new treatments for people and animals with seizure disorders.

Thirty students are selected for specialized research projects and mentorship in the Students Training in Advanced Research program. The veterinary scholars learn the scientific method, investigate pressing health issues and present research findings to their peers. These and similar programs encourage students to consider veterinary research careers.

Food animal veterinarians and other scientists begin a $600,000 project to advance the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of bovine respiratory disease in dairy calves. Respiratory disease is the leading natural cause of death in US beef and dairy cattle, causing losses of more than one million animals and $700 million every year.

Emergency medicine clinicians at the William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital treat a paralyzed border collie, placing the patient on a ventilator for 22 days until he can breathe and move again on his own. Knowledge gleaned from this rare case is expected to greatly increase understanding of mechanical ventilation in veterinary practice.

Three Nobel laureates—Jules Hoffmann, Bruce Beutler and Stanley B. Prusiner—inform and inspire faculty, staff, students and community members about specialized aspects of innate immunity, immune system deficiencies and prion-related brain disorders.

Food animal veterinarians collaborate on a $25 million USDA effort to prevent potentially fatal illnesses linked to E. coli. School faculty begin research to increase understanding of the epidemiology and ecology of non-Shiga toxin-producing E. coli in dairy cattle.

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2011 Year in Review

Dean Bennie I. Osburn retires after three terms, crowning a career spanning more than 40 years; faculty, staff and students welcome the school's eighth dean, Michael D. Lairmore, a comparative cancer researcher

The Mouse Biology Program receives $37.8 million to develop mouse disease models and establish a phenotyping center for genetically altered mice used in studies of human cancers, diabetes and heart disease

Faculty implement the first year of the new student-centered curriculum, which radically changes course work, teaching methods and clinical training experience to best prepare veterinary graduates for practice

The Institute of Medicine elects to its ranks Patricia Conrad, a veterinary parasitologist known for her ground-breaking research on babesiosis; she co-directs the One Health Center of the UC Global Health Institute

Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital equine specialists provide critical care services and timely guidelines that help California halt an outbreak of a rare but serious and highly contagious form of equine herpes virus

Scientists in the Department of Molecular Biosciences find that the hormone leptin actually lowers blood sugar levels in mice prone to type 2 diabetes; this new knowledge may lead to new diabetes treatments

Students organize and host nearly 1,500 fellow veterinary students at the national Student American Veterinary Medical Association Symposium, three days of educational seminars and networking activities

Faculty in the Veterinary Medicine Teaching & Research Center and Dept. of Pathology, Microbiology & Immunology join a major USDA project to tackle bovine respiratory disease, the leading cause of death in cattle

Comparative Cancer Center and School of Medicine researchers identify a protein that appears to play a key role in the formation of lymphoma by inhibiting a tumor-suppressing gene of animals and people

The PREDICT program unveils an interactive public map and real-time reporting of zoonotic disease outbreaks around the world; the information will help infectious disease experts prevent full-scale epidemics

The International Laboratory of Molecular Biology for Tropical Disease and an international team develop and successfully test two genetically modified Rift Valley fever vaccines that could be adapted for humans

Department of Molecular Biosciences researchers show that a high-sugar diet raises levels of three known risk factors for heart disease: LDL cholesterol, triglycerides and a protein that can lead to plaque buildup in arteries

A training grant managed by the Western Institute for Food Safety and Security sets universities and the FDA on the path to national food-safety training standards for those working at all levels of food production

One Health researchers at the Wildlife Health Center and partners in Africa confirm that a virus causing respiratory disease in humans is linked to the deaths of endangered mountain gorillas

The Veterinary Genetics Laboratory Forensic Unit provides the first DNA analysis successfully used in animal cruelty prosecutions in New York City; the DNA evidence results in two felony convictions

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2010 Year in Review

Leaders of the Oiled Wildlife Care Network go to the Gulf of Mexico for several months to oversee the rescue and rehabilitation of more than 1,200 sea turtles and mammals injured in the oil industry's largest marine spill in history

Addressing animal welfare concerns, Western Institute for Food Safety and Security faculty conduct 25 statewide workshops for the evaluation of livestock welfare practices and animal care management

Working with a public health organization in Uganda, student Ryan Sadler conducts a One Health project to collect data on disease organisms that can be transmitted among wildlife, livestock and people

Former state veterinarian Richard Breitmeyer becomes director of the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory, overseeing statewide diagnostic programs related to livestock and poultry diseases

A veterinarian at the William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital and a UC Davis physician perform a novel, laser-assisted surgery and correct a near-fatal swallowing disorder in a young dog

Recruiting future veterinarians, the Office of Student Programs and the UC Davis Department of Academic Preparation welcome 30 rural high school students to the first Veterinary Medicine Exploration Academy

To help national humane organizations prosecute dog-fighting crimes and prevent animal abuse, the Veterinary Genetics Laboratory establishes a DNA identification database of more than 400 dogs seized in raids

Veterinary neurologists are helping dogs with brain tumors in a study to test the safety of a new technique proposed for humans that delivers chemotherapy drugs directly into tumors that lie deep within the skull

Faculty in the Department of Molecular Biosciences show for the first time how weight-loss surgery may delay the onset of Type 2 diabetes, a disease affecting 23.6 million people in the United States

The International Animal Welfare Training Institute begins coordinating development of the California Animal Response Emergency System, a statewide framework to include animals in all emergency preparedness plans

The JD Wheat Veterinary Orthopedic Research Laboratory presents data indicating that synthetic racetrack surfaces have significant potential for reducing musculoskeletal injuries in Thoroughbred racehorses

Autistic children are far more likely to have deficits in their ability to produce cellular energy, which directly affects brain function, than are typically developing children, sayDepartment of Molecular Biosciences researchers

Shelter medicine veterinarians contribute expertise and guidance to a new national resource, Standards of Care In Animal Shelters: Guidelines for Protecting Health and Well-Being of Sheltered Animals

Sea Doc Society divers remove hundreds of discarded tires and toilets from the ocean floor off the Southern California coast; program leaders also calculate that paying $1,358 to remove a single derelict fishing net can save up to $19,656 in losses to the Dungeness crab fishery, a cost-benefit ratio of 1:14.5

Equine welfare experts publish Equine Sanctuary & Rescue Facility Guidelines to help ensure that horses maintained at equine sanctuaries and rescue farms receive adequate management and proper health care

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2009 Year in Review

The Wildlife Health Center Mountain Gorilla One Health Program will conserve the world's 740 mountain gorillas by caring for gorillas, people and other animals that share a home in the forests of central Africa

Faculty in the Department of Molecular Biosciences learn how fructose-sweetened beverages affect metabolism in overweight people, increasing visceral fats and decreasing insulin sensitivity

The Regenerative Medicine Laboratory opens to treat equine orthopedic injuries with stem cells, provide laboratory services for referring veterinarians, and conduct stem-cell research with the School of Medicine

The UC Animal Welfare Advisory Council is established to review issues of agricultural animal welfare and promote the development of science-based recommendations for the welfare of livestock and poultry

The Western Institute for Food Safety and Security found that less than one-half of one percent of tested wild animals showed positive for E. coli O157:H7, the bacteria that caused a 2006 disease outbreak

A USAID PREDICT grant of up to $75 million to the Wildlife Health Center is supporting a global disease surveillance program to prevent wildlife diseases from spreading to people in "hot spots" around the world

The stereotactic radiosurgery procedure becomes available through the Small Animal Oncology Service to treat cancer and other tumors in the brain more accurately, safely and quickly in dogs and cats

The Veterinary Genetics Laboratory contributes to the completion of the sequencing of the equine genome; the project's findings hold important implications for improved breeding and health of horses

Specialized clinicians at the Aquatic Animal Health Service offer on-site and on-call fish health services for individually owned and commercially raised fish and other aquatic species

Clinical faculty and mechanical engineering students collaborate to make a wheeled support system for dogs in rehabilitation and a laryngoscope that helps a veterinarian examine the long throat of a llama

Researchers in the Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Cell Biology discover that ozone exposure, even at levels deemed safe by current standards, can have a significantnegative effect on lung function

Twenty veterinary students in the Early Veterinary Student Bovine Experience Program gained intensive hands-on training, practical mentoring and an in-depth appreciation of food animal practice

The Center for Children's Environmental Health shows how polychlorinated biphenyls alter developing brain cells; findings may explain associations between exposures to PCB's and behavioral deficits

Shelter medicine veterinarians are applying herd health concepts to examine environmental and group risk factors associated with common feline respiratory infections in shelter cats

Nearly 200 faculty, staff and students volunteer for Spay Day 2009, performing the service for low-income community members as part of a national effort to reduce pet overpopulation and improve animal welfare


2008 Year in Review

During the UC Davis centennial, the School of Veterinary Medicine celebrates 60 years--and countless contributions in teaching, research and service that has benefited animal, human and environmental health.

Researchers identify a gene mutation causing high levels of uric acid in all Dalmatian dogs and bladder stones in some Dalmatians; the discovery offers clues to the cause of similar problems in humans.

W. David Wilson becomes director of the William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital.

The school establishes the International Animal Welfare Training Institute to promote dialog, build science-based approaches to animal welfare, including livestock well-being, and conduct emergency response training.

Center for Children's Environmental Health researchers discover that antibodies in the blood of mothers of certain autistic children bind to fetal brain cells, a process that may interrupt healthy brain development.

The first International Symposium on Veterinary Hospice Care addresses end-of-life issues for pets.

The Transfusion Medicine Service creates a community-based canine blood donor program.

Center for Comparative Medicine researchers discover that Lyme disease bacteria linger after a full round of antibiotic treatment, setting the stage for new investigations of potential therapies in this chronic disease.

The Student Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society creates the first student-sponsored endowment.

Researchers at the Veterinary Genetics Laboratory develop the first test to identify and help prevent equine cerebellar abiotrophy, a serious neurological disease in Arabian horses.

Rell Parker, DVM Class of 2010, is among the first veterinary students to receive a scholarship to the year-long Howard Hughes Medical Institute-National Institutes of Health Research Scholars Program.

Faculty participating with an international research team find the first clear example of how climate extremes can create conditions in which multiple infectious outbreaks may cause mass die-offs of livestock or wildlife.

A Dale Chihuly art "chandelier" donated as part of the campus Art in Public Places program is installed in Valley Hall; the 12 by 8-foot sculpture contains 579 pieces of hand-blown glass assembled over a 4-day period.

In a study involving 11,000 cats, genetic researchers conclude that all ancestral roads for today's domestic cat lead back to the "cradle of civilization" for humans, the Fertile Crescent of the Middle East.

The Health for Animals and Livelihood Improvement Project partners with communities of Tanzania to improve the quality of water sources shared by people, wildlife and domestic animals.

Cardiology experts expand services in Davis and the University of California Veterinary Medical Center, San Diego to serve more patients, offer new treatments, and support specialty training in this dynamic field.

The school confronts new financial challenges in almost every program, administrative function and facilities plan as an unprecedented economic crisis affects state, federal and private funding of the school.

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2007 Year in Review

Recognizing the enduring influence of the veterinary educator who served 20 years as dean, the school celebrates the dedication of the William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital.

Faculty geneticists and dermatologists identify a gene mutation and develop a new diagnostic test that can lead to the elimination of "HERDA," a debilitating, degenerative skin disease in horses.

On Spay Day 2007, 250 volunteer faculty members, staff employees and students pitch in to spay or neuter 100 dogs; the community event assists low-income families and reduces pet overpopulation.

Veterinary Medicine III A opens; the new research and multipurpose teaching facility incorporates clinical, teaching and research labs and co-locates all DVM teaching activities for the first time in more than 30 years.

The Students Training in Advanced Research (STAR) program introduces 40 students to veterinary research methods and new career options by supporting summer projects in animal health and basic research.

Toxicologists at the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory identify contaminants in pet food and discover that cats fed pet food combining melamine and cyanuric acid experienced acute kidney failure.

The WALTHAM University of California Veterinary Medical Center - San Diego Clinical Nutrition Program opens in San Diego, with pharmaceutical nutrition services for regional clients and resources for area veterinarians.

Veterinary faculty offer International Flu School in six African countries, demonstrating the power of preventive veterinary medicine; training has improved animal health, human nutrition, and small-farm income.

The Western Institute for Food Safety and Security implements the only comprehensive training course for agroterrorism preparedness certified by the US Department of Homeland Security.

The Doctoring course enriches students' understanding of client relations, business practices, the bond between clients and their pets and other essential, non-medical aspects of veterinary practice.

The Oiled Wildlife Care Network mobilizes in November and December to treat and rehabilitate hundreds of seabirds injured when a container ship spills 58,000 gallons of fuel into San Francisco Bay.

The laboratory designed for the instruction of surgery, anesthesiology and radiology is named the Ira M. "Gary" Gourley Clinical Teaching Center to honor the highly regarded professor emeritus of small animal surgery.

The Center for Children's Environmental Health begins the first prospective study to seek early markers of autism during pregnancy; developmental studies of rats shed new light on environmental aspects of autism.

The Summer Enrichment Program helps prospective veterinary students break barriers to professional education through classroom and lab courses, mentoring and veterinary hospital experience.

Researchers at the Center for Vectorborne Disease identify a gene mutation that may change relatively mild forms of West Nile virus into a highly virulent disease in American crows, a major sentinel species.

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2006 Year in Review

The Gladys Valley Hall teaching facility opens, bringing students together for classroom instruction for the first time in decades as class size expands from 122 to 131 students.

Veterinary Emergency Response Team volunteers donate their time for several weeks to treat hundreds of sheep burned in September wildfires; students also learn about the role of euthanasia in compassionate veterinary practice.

Veterinary Medicine Extension and the Wildlife Health Center launch the international Flu School to train veterinarians, public health experts, and producers dealing with prevention or outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza.

The veterinary research budget expands by 44% to $96 million for studies of animal, human and environmental health.

A veterinary study at the Center for Children's Environmental Health links thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative, with immune dysfunction in mice; results may have implications for the study of autism in children.

At the annual Spay Day community service event, students assist faculty and staff with 100 spay-neuter procedures on dogs; the all-volunteer event, part of a national effort, helps low-income families and reduces pet overpopulation.

Faculty members of the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory, working with state and federal agencies, succeed in developing a single, rapid test to screen for foot-and-mouth disease and six "look-alike" diseases in livestock.

Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital experts in ultrasound and endoscopy travel to Namibia to help conservationists with a project to improve fertility in cheetahs and assure the long-term genetic survival of this endangered species.

Dr. Margaret Slater presents "Homeless Pets, Public Health and Changing Public Perceptions" at the 2006 Robert Dyar Labrador Memorial Lectureship in Epidemiology.

The Waltham/UC Veterinary Medical Center - San Diego Clinical Nutrition Program begins; specialists recommend commercial or home-prepared diets to help manage disease and provide individualized weight-loss programs for obese pets.

Three National Institutes of Health grants totaling $5.7 million expand the Mouse Biology Program responsibilities in a worldwide effort to develop and share genetically altered mice that serve as models of animal and human disease.

Students and other volunteers of the Mercer Veterinary Clinic for the Homeless provide free veterinary services, spay-neuter assistance-and 24,000 pounds of pet food per year-for pets of the homeless in Sacramento.

The Sacramento Zoo dedicates the Murray E. Fowler Veterinary Hospital to honor the emeritus professor who pioneered zoological medicine and established the first zoo medicine residency program in the nation.

Research findings in transgenic goats may lead to the production of milk with properties that can protect infants against diarrhea, which kills more than 2 million children each year around the world.

Students co-sponsor the first annual Alpaca and Llama Symposium for owners, breeders and veterinarians; students organize events throughout the year to enrich their learning about behavior, medicine and health in various species.

Emergency and intensive care services and resources-including five mechanical ventilators unavailable at most clinics-help Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital faculty save a dog from a lung infection that can kill up to 85% of patients.

To promote greater interest in science, the Veterinary Student Outreach Club presents family-friendly activities and discusses animal health with 50,000 visitors to the KCRA-TV 3 Health and Fitness Expo in Sacramento.

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2005 Year in Review

The AVMA restores full accreditation; school officials rededicate themselves to the $354 million building program that brought five buildings under construction in five years.

Carol Cardona—Vet Med Extension, Walter Boyce—Wildlife Health Center, and other infectious disease experts at UC Davis join forces to inform the media, educate the public and coordinate preparedness strategies to prevent an epidemic of avian influenza.

Veterinary cardiologists Mark Kittleson and Kristin MacDonald help discover a gene mutation responsible for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, the most common cause of heart disease in cats; this devastating inherited disease can also cause sudden death in young human athletes.

The Claire Giannini Hoffman Equine Athletic Performance Laboratory opens; with two treadmills that allow horses to run safely at a full gallop, this facility helps faculty evaluate and treat lameness, respiratory or cardiovascular problems in horses; researchers also investigate performance issues of equine athletes.

The Early Veterinary Student Bovine Experience Program supports 19 veterinary students to gain practical experience alongside dairy and beef veterinarians and consider food animal medicine careers.

On Spay Day, more than 500 school volunteers spay and neuter 300 dogs and cats in a community effort to serve low-income pet owners, protect animal health and well-being, and reduce pet overpopulation.

A new, rapid diagnostic test developed in the Lucy G. Whittier Molecular Diagnostic Core Facility identifies canine influenza, an emerging infectious disease of special concern for shelters and kennels.

The Oiled Wildlife Care Network rescues 1500 sea birds near Ventura after winter storms cause California's worst oil spill in 2 years; vets also help rehabilitate hundreds of pelican chicks after a storm-related event in Louisiana.

Forty-four students in the Students Training in Advanced Research (STAR) program develop summer research projects with faculty mentors in basic sciences and clinical research.

The Veterinary Genetics Laboratory offers new genetic tests to detect grave disorders—glycogen branching enzyme deficiency in horses and polycystic kidney disease in cats.

After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita inundate Louisiana, school volunteers travel to help at veterinary shelters; answer dozens of calls to the Pet Loss Support Hotline; and treat pets relocated to California rescue centers.

The Master of Public Health program, a joint teaching program with the School of Medicine, earns full accreditation to prepare veterinarians and other health professionals for careers in public health and medical care.

Seeking to refine air quality standards, the Environmental Protection Agency presented UC Davis with $8 million for veterinary researchers to study the health effects of airborne particles in the lungs and heart.

To gain a "toolbox of skills" in communication, client relations and community or professional service, the Class of 2009 participates in Leadership Training during orientation week.

The Kenneth L. Maddy Equine Analytical Chemistry Laboratory earns certification for having met international standards for chemical testing; this laboratory performs all required drug testing on California race horses.

Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital clinicians in the Ophthalmology and Exotics services perform high-frequency ultrasound studies of the eyes of 12 live snakes, gathering the first detailed information recorded about the structure of healthy snake eyes.

The SeaDoc Society pilots a program to identify and clean up abandoned fishing gear along the California coast to reduce underwater hazards that can harm marine animals, sensitive habitat and people.

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2004 Year in Review

The school's first White Coat Ceremony welcomes the Class of 2008 to the veterinary profession.

The Wildlife Health Center publishes an intensive study showing that mountain lions live closer than we realize, but tend to avoid humans; the ongoing assessment provides information useful in managing the co-existence of pumas and people.

The Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital Physical Therapy Service, complete with underwater treadmills and other specialized equipment, offers therapy for cases of surgical recovery, stroke rehabilitation, arthritis and orthopedic injury.

At the first International Veterinary Conference in Kuwait, Dean Bennie I. Osburn and other veterinarians initiate an international effort to rebuild war-torn veterinary service systems and veterinary education in Afghanistan and Iraq; the plan includes developing research opportunities and student exchanges in the Middle East.

A team of clinicians and researchers identifies the genetic roots of equine malignant hyperthermia, a life-threatening disorder that may develop during anesthesia; results will lead to better clinical prevention strategies and insights about the condition in horses, other animals and humans.

The California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory and Center for Vectorborne Disease confirm West Nile virus in thousands of mosquitoes and birds as the disease reaches Northern California for the first time.

Veterinary virologist Tilahun Yilma, known for his vital work with rinderpest diagnostics and vaccines, is elected to the National Academy of Sciences, one of the highest honors accorded to scientists and engineers in the United States.

The Center for Companion Animal Health, the largest privately funded facility on campus, celebrates its grand opening in July; the new space holds research labs and triples capacity for cancer treatment of small animals.

Food animal researchers develop a DNA-based test that detects minute amounts of ruminant protein in livestock feed; the test may reduce risks of BSE, or mad cow disease, transmitted to food animals through contaminated feed products.

At the school's first Spay Day, 400 faculty, staff and student volunteers unite to perform 300 spay-neuter procedures in a single day to reduce pet overpopulation and improve animal welfare in the Sacramento Valley.

School faculty and partners of the National Center for Foreign Animal and Zoonotic Disease Defense develop ways to detect and control avian influenza, foot-and-mouth disease, Rift Valley fever and other infectious disease threats.

Harold Davis, RVT, presents the inaugural Jack Mara Memorial Lecture at the North American Veterinary Conference, where he was honored for accomplishments during his 22-year career at the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital.

Center for Comparative Medicine researchers develop a sensitive PET-scan in mice to analyze cancers comparable to human disease; the technology helps scientists detect cancer cells at different stages of disease and may lead to better evaluation of cancer-fighting drugs.

The Renal Transplantation team performs a successful kidney transplant on a Belgian cat, the program's first patient from Europe; the surgical team has conducted more than 300 kidney transplants since 1987.

The Western Institute for Food Safety and Security receives $4.7 million from the Department of Homeland Security to train personnel how to prevent, recognize and deal with potential terrorist acts directed at the nation's food supply.

Center for Companion Animal Health geneticists discover the mutation that causes polycystic kidney disease, a common disorder of Persian cats; a diagnostic test will help identify and prevent this serious disease, which also occurs in humans.

The Aldo Leopold Leadership Progam names its first veterinarian, Patricia Conrad, as a fellow in its environmental science communications training program.

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2003 Year in Review

The Center for Vectorborne Disease identifies the first evidence of West Nile virus in California, testing 11,000 mosquito pools, 2,000 dead bird tissues, and serum from 5,000 wild birds in 2003; veterinary school seminars help horse owners prepare and vaccinate their animals.

Oscar W. Schalm lecturer Patricia A. Conrad explains how parasitic diseases are transmitted in wildlife, domestic animals and people; her research team discovers that high numbers of sea otters died 1998-2001 from newly recognized parasitic diseases and note possible links between domestic cats, storm-drain runoff and marine ecosystems.

Faculty and staff of Veterinary Medicine Extension and the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory work in key roles during an outbreak of exotic Newcastle disease in poultry; the team works with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories to develop a rapid, DNA-based diagnostic test immediately deployed in surveillance efforts.

Clinical nutritionists unveil the Nutrition Support Center to meet dogs' and cats' exacting dietary needs and contribute to successful overall management of clinical cases at the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital.

The Veterinary Medicine Teaching and Research Center, Tulare, marks its 20th anniversary supporting improved food animal health and veterinary science at the hub of the U.S. dairy industry.

The Center for Animals in Society names new director Rick Timmins to lead programs that enhance understanding of human-animal relationships and apply that understanding for the betterment of both humans and animals.

Veterinary geneticists discover that mountain lion populations in different geographic regions of the state have distinct genetic structures; results will help officials anticipate migration patterns and manage wildlife corridors.

The Large Animal Rescue Team conducts two equine airlift rescues, one for a horse in the Auburn area and another of an injured pack mule stranded in a canyon of the Eastern Sierra near Bishop.

The name of a new Bartonella species, Bartonella chomelii, honors Bruno B. Chomel, the first scientist to isolate Bartonella bovis from domestic cattle and demonstrate transmission of the bacteria by fleas in cats.

The Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital establishes the first veterinary pharmacy residency to familiarize pharmacists with unique aspects of veterinary clinical pharmacy and methods of veterinary pharmaceutical research.

The School of Veterinary Medicine Livestock Nursery introduces California State Fair visitors to the daily miracles of farm life while veterinary students gain valuable experience with normal livestock births.

UCTV television program "State of Minds" features the school's Maddie's Shelter Medicine Program as a pioneering effort to improve the quality of life for animals in shelters.

Student Daniel Famini and collaborators specializing in animal locomotion document that elephants can travel at up to 15 miles per hour and exhibit an unusual gait that may shed light on how large animals move at high speeds.

The Michael R. Floyd Dental Operatory celebrates its 10th anniversary; this unique facility set a new standard in veterinary dentistry services and serves as an integral component of the companion animal teaching program.

The Sea Doc Society focuses research and educational missions on the marine wildlife and ecosystem health of the Pacific Ocean in Washington and British Columbia.

Student volunteers hand out a record-setting 100 "holiday pet baskets" at the Mercer Veterinary Clinic for the Homeless; teaching hospital staff members have collected donations and assembled the baskets since 1995.

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2002 Year in Review

The Veterinary Medicine Laboratory Facility opens in the Health Sciences Complex for student instruction.

The Oiled Wildlife Care Network mobilizes November 2001-July 2002 to rescue and rehabilitate birds injured off the San Francisco coast in a mystery oil spill; officials eventually discover that the oil has leaked from a freighter sunken in 1953.

vFeline geneticists confirm the world's first cloned cat; the use of cloning to develop new animal models of disease stands to benefit human health research.

A partnership with the School of Medicine leads to establishment of the Master of Public Health (MPH) degree program for veterinarians pursuing careers in food safety, zoonoses, and other areas impacting human health.

Researchers determine how blood platelets can be freeze-dried and stored for at least a year at room temperature before being reconstituted with water; the discovery advances the safety and stability of blood products and contributes to understanding how blood clots can cause heart attacks and strokes.

The first vaccine for feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) gains approval for commercial veterinary use; the virus was first isolated at UC Davis in 1986.

The UC Veterinary Medical Center - San Diego opens its Hemodialysis Service for companion animals in Southern California and establishes a combined residency-PhD program in comparative pathology.

Students gain field experience in equine medicine, surgery, anesthesia, animal handling and wildlife issues during outreach effort at the Wild Horse Sanctuary, home to hundreds of feral horses in Northern California.

Research results suggest environmental factors may be contributing to disease involved in the precipitous decline of California's Southern sea otter population.

Students produce instructional videos that help clients learn how to use feeding tubes and conduct other complex home care procedures needed for follow-up care of pets discharged from the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital.

The Western Institute for Food Safety and Security launches its program to unite academia, government and industry in a focused research effort encompassing plant- and animal-related food safety and security.

Shelter Medicine Program personnel investigate and confirm a rare, often fatal, calicivirus outbreak in Southern California cats and work with practitioners and feline rescue groups to contain the disease within several weeks.

Faculty receive campus-wide recognition: Tiluhan Yilma receives the Faculty Research Lecturer Award; Alan Conley becomes a Chancellor's Fellow; and Bruce Madewell assumes leadership of UC Davis Academic Senate.

Students organize an international veterinary project in El Salvador, teaching members of a women's cooperative how to recognize signs of poor health in cattle and perform simple procedures to manage the health of their animals.

Veterinary nutritionists at the Nutrition Clinic work with veterinarians and clients to recommend commercial or home-cooked diets for animals with previously diagnosed diseases or obesity.

The Veterinary Genetics Laboratory forensics testing service assists law enforcement by using DNA typing techniques to identify animal evidence associated with crime scenes.

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2001 Year in Review

The Southern California Ecosystem Health Program begins a long-term study of mountain lions, deer, bighorn sheep and humans to determine best habitat management for wildlife health and human safety.

The Early Veterinary Student Dairy Experience Program offers students in-depth experience with dairy farmers and practitioners to promote food animal medicine careers and food safety awareness.

A foot-and-mouth disease seminar sponsored by the school draws farm producers, veterinarians and agricultural officials to outline statewide strategies for prevention and control of foreign animal diseases.

The JD Wheat Orthopedic Research Laboratory develops recommendations for shoeing of racehorses, management of training intensity, and monitoring for early signs of injury after a study identifies specific risk factors.

New Center for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention is launched to investigate possible environmental triggers of autism through interrelated medical research and studies in molecular biology.

Staff install "Vet LiNC" Web cameras that bring the school's livestock nursery at the State Fair to thousands of online visitors, educating the public about animal health and reproduction on the farm.

The Oiled Wildlife Care Network opens two facilities, Suisun-San Francisco Bay and San Pedro, for rescue and rehabilitation of sea birds and small marine mammals affected by oil spills.

Stephen W. Barthold, director of the Center for Comparative Medicine, is elected to the National Institute of Medicine, joining other nationally known advisers on public health policy issues.

The Center for Companion Animal Health breaks ground for one of the first new buildings being constructed to address facilities concerns; $14 million expansion project is privately funded.

Annual research budget reaches $61 million, with 54% of funding dedicated to human and environmental health issues.

The California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory improves the diagnosis of oleander poisoning in livestock with a highly sensitive test using methods of analytical chemistry. Other new assays detect antibiotic residues in milk and toxic algae in water.

The Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital continually expands specialty services and training, now offering canine kidney transplant surgery options, a clinical nutrition service and residency program, and other unique resources.

The school establishes the Veterinarian Scientist Training Program (DVM/PhD) and the Peter C. Kennedy Endowed Fellowship in Veterinary Anatomic Pathology to help scholar-researchers achieve career goals.

The Maddie's Shelter Medicine Program, with a $2.2 million grant from Maddie's Fund, provides medical care and preventive medicine services to participating animal shelters, conducts infectious disease research, and offers residency training. The program is complemented by the student-run Shelter Dog Rescue Project.

The UC Veterinary Medical Center - San Diego launches 2 residency programs-in zoological medicine and zoological pathology-that combine 3 years of specialized training with in-depth experience at the Sacramento Zoo, San Diego Zoo, and San Diego Wild Animal Park.

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2000 Year in Review

The California Animal Health And Food Safety Laboratory System announces a new name reflecting the expanded role of veterinary diagnostic services and research in protecting California's food supply.

The Marine Ecosystem Health Program, administered by the Wildlife Health Center, is inaugurated to conduct research on the health of wildlife populations and their environments along the Pacific Coast.

The first formal veterinary information model, designed by James T. Case, improves the efficiency of medical record-keeping among public health professionals by including animal-related data, environmental samples and food safety samples.

The 3rd Annual Job Fair brings California practitioners and students together to develop professional relationships, including summer jobs and career positions.

The Equine Physical Therapy Service opens, the nation's first unit to meet unique diagnostic and therapeutic needs of injured performance horses. Faculty expertise in this area benefits horses at the 2000 Olympics.

Hanspeter Witschi and his team discover that a special diet can prevent lung cancer in mice exposed to cigarette smoke and may assist with preclinical testing of substances aimed at preventing lung cancer in former smokers.

Comprehensive $354 million facilities plan addresses accreditation concerns and outlines facilities designed to support the school's long-term vision.

At Annual Awards Ceremony, DVM students receive $1.25 million in scholarships and financial aid.

The 1st Alternative Pets Fair, sponsored by the Center for Companion Animal Health, welcomes 1,300 members of the public to learn about the special health and care needs of exotic and non-traditional companion animals.

SeaWorld, San Diego opens a new Oiled Wildlife Care Network facility to rescue and rehabilitate sea birds and small marine mammals affected by oil spills.

New Genetics Service and residency helps clients detect and manage inherited diseases in companion animals.

Dog and cat genome mapping projects begin.

A pilot leadership program offers 22 incoming DVM students a set of strategies for pursuing leadership opportunities balanced with work and personal life in veterinary school and beyond.

Oscar W. Schalm lecturer and Nobel Prize winner Peter C. Doherty, chair of the Department of Immunology at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, presents "Dealing with Virus Infections."

Charles Plopper and his team show for the first time that exposure to ozone can change how lungs develop and respond to air pollution; future work may unlock the causes of and new therapies for the treatment of asthma, especially in children.

The Peace Corps Master's International Program combines study for the school's Master of Preventive Veterinary Medicine degree with a project or thesis based on Peace Corps experience.

The Bernice Barbour Communicable Disease Laboratory of the Center for Equine Health is established to discover the causes of infectious disease in animals and humans by investigating processes that diseases share in common.

The Maddie's Shelter Medicine Program, supported by Maddie's Fund, establishes the Shelter Medicine Service and residency and focuses research to prevent infectious diseases and behavior problems in shelter animal populations.

Annual research budget reaches $60 million, with 45% of funding dedicated to human and environmental health issues.

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1999 Year in Review

The largest gift to the UC Davis campus, $10.7 million from the Wayne and Gladys Valley Foundation, will address limited accreditation status and facility concerns.

The first Lyme disease vaccine available for human use is approved by the FDA. Stephen Barthold, director, Center for Comparative Medicine, co-invented the vaccine.

The UC Health Sciences Committee completes the first UC system-wide look at veterinary manpower and education since 1973, recommends that DVM class size increase from 122 to 150.

Faculty carry out academic planning to assess programs and project future directions of the school.

California Assembly Agriculture Committee conducts a hearing on the school's accreditation status and facilities concerns.

At Annual Awards Ceremony, DVM students receive nearly $1 million in scholarships and financial aid.

The UC Veterinary Medical Center - San Diego opens its first clinical program, the Behavior Service.

The Lucy Whittier Neonatal Foal Unit at the teaching hospital dedicates efforts toward intensive care of newborn horses.

The National Library of Medicine presents one of its only awards to a veterinarian, Glenna Gobar, DVM, one of the first candidates for the Master of Medical Informatics degree.

The 3rd International Congress of Ecosystem Health, co-sponsored by the school, focuses on key environmental issues: emerging infectious diseases, toxins, water and air quality, wildlife health and biodiversity.

The Center for Vector-Borne Diseases welcomes its first director, John D. Edman. The center provides teaching, research and surveillance programs on the biology of mosquitoes, ticks and other organisms that spread disease to animals and humans.

Oscar W. Schalm lecturer Christopher Murphy, professor of ophthalmology at the University of Wisconsin, presents a discussion of animal vision .

Members of the Veterinary Medical Assistance Team, a volunteer rescue and disaster preparedness organization, travel to North Carolina to assist with animal airlift rescues during flooding from Hurricane Floyd.

The Institute of Medicine inducts Frederick A. Murphy, the school's dean 1991-1996 and professor of virology, as the sole veterinarian of 55 individuals elected, for career contributions in health and medicine, including zoonotic viral disease.

Animal Ambassadors introduces its science outreach curriculum in 30 locations around the state, primarily in 4-H after-school groups. The ambassadors program helps elementary school students K - 8 learn about animals and science.

The Bernard and Gloria Salick Equine Viral Diseases Laboratory is established for diagnosis, control and study of the global spread of viruses in animals and, potentially, humans.

Denmark confers knighthood on Professor Hans P. Riemann to recognize his lifetime of service in food safety and veterinary educational exchange.

The Kenneth L. Maddy Equine Analytical Chemistry Laboratory facility is officially dedicated. This $7.4 million facility will conduct routine drug testing of racehorses and research on the effects of medications on equine performance.

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1998 Year in Review

In 1998, the School of Veterinary Medicine celebrates fifty years of professional education, scientific research, and public service. Current trends include the following events and activities:

The School names equine surgeon Gregory Ferraro director of the Center for Equine Health. Ferraro coordinates the service programs and research for California's $3.4 billion horse industry. He also cultivates financial support for School programs enhancing the health of the state's 642,000 horses.

The Center for Comparative Medicine opens in June. Collaborators from the School of Veterinary Medicine and the School of Medicine are working together to find the causes and cures of persistent infectious diseases, especially viruses affecting animals and humans.

Public health agencies and a biotechnology firm collaborate with UC Davis researchers to develop a vaccine to protect animals and humans from avian influenza. This and other cutting-edge, genetics-based research projects demonstrate the human side of veterinary medicine.

The School begins the state's first education project administered jointly by a high school, a community college and a university. The new California Dairy Technology Center in Tulare will operate a self-supporting, working dairy where students will learn relevant technical job skills and explore veterinary careers.

Working with state authorities, the School identifies a new contagious equine illness. A separate cooperative effort with agricultural experts analyzes risks to cattle productions in the event of an infectious disease outbreak. Both events highlight the School's expertise and liaison role between industry and government in livestock protection.

New assistant dean Mary Christopher guides and customizes the professional curriculum. New academic programs and teaching tools such as interactive software authored by faculty assure relevant course work, materials, and instructional methods to educate California's future veterinarians.

An enrollment increase from 108-122 students addresses a growing need for health professionals. About 77% of School graduates remain in the state, the highest retention rate in the country. Each graduating class represents about one-third of the veterinarians licensed in California each year.

The 100th feline kidney transplant represents just one aspect of the sophistication of animal care at the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital.

At the 50th Anniversary Gala in August, friends and colleagues celebrate and rededicate themselves to leadership in animal, human, and environmental health. The dean publicly announces a $50 million, 50th Anniversary Campaign to fund new mandates and visions for the next century of veterinary medicine and education.

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