Panels discuss federal research funding threats, opportunities

Lead with values, innovate, engage with your community, contact elected officials, write to local newspapers – and work to build more resilient systems. Those were some of the strategies legal and policy experts shared on Feb. 28 during a pair of public panels organized by faculty and students to discuss the state of science research amid proposed severe cuts to federal grants and layoffs of federal employees, including research scientists.

continue reading

 


 

COVID-flu vaccine could provide broad, lasting protection

Cornell researchers have developed a new vaccine platform that could provide more robust, longer-lasting protection from both COVID-19 and influenza, and broader immunity to different flu strains. In a study published Jan. 29 in Science Advances, researchers found no visible signs of illness in mouse models after vaccination with the new platform and no cellular damage to tissues.

continue reading

 


 

What veterinary students are saying and how AVMA VP Marshall is listening

Dr. Gary Marshall, the 2024-26 AVMA vice president, is nearing the halfway point of his two-year term as the AVMA’s official liaison to the Student AVMA (SAVMA) and its student chapters in addition to veterinary college deans and faculty. In late February, Dr. Marshall was visiting veterinary schools in the United Kingdom when he made time for AVMA News to share insights from his first year in office.

continue reading

 


 

How veterinary school graduates can start a practice with high student debt

DVM360

As a healthcare banker at US Bank, I talk all the time with veterinarians who want to start their own practices. The question I often hear: Can I get financing to start or acquire a practice, even with all of my veterinary school debt? My answer can surprise them: Yes, they can—if they build a practice the right way, with the right support.

continue reading

 


 

Advanced imaging in horses: Where, why, when?

The Horse

Veterinarians can use positron emission tomography (PET), computed tomography (CT), or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to help diagnose problems in equine patients, but how do they choose which to use? Timothy Manzi, VMD, Dipl. ACVR-EDI, clinical assistant professor of large animal diagnostic imaging at the University of Pennsylvania’s New Bolton Center, in Kennett Square, and Myra Barrett, MS, DVM, Dipl. ACVR-EDI, associate professor of equine diagnostic imaging at Colorado State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine, in Fort Collins addressed this nuanced question.

continue reading