Hospital
For Emergencies:
Small Animals: 517-353-5420Large Animals: 517-353-9710
A full-service veterinary diagnostic laboratory offering more than 800 tests in 11 service sections
World-class faculty bring innovation and creativity to shaping students in an environment that integrates academic and clinical teaching. We offer DVM and graduate programs, a residency program, a veterinary technician program, and continuing education.
Scientists at the college conduct high-impact basic, translational, and clinical research within the college and across campus—yielding new drugs, devices, and therapies for the benefit of animals and people.
Talented specialists and researchers generate new knowledge at the college—from critical care and cardiology to ophthalmology and orthopedic surgery. We bring emerging therapies and technologies directly to our patients as they are developed.
The novel coronavirus has introduced a wave of hard economic times within the state of Michigan, and students are not immune. Throughout this crisis, DVM and Veterinary Nursing students at the MSU College of Veterinary Medicine have faced the loss of employment, as well as their in-person experiences in clinics and the classroom. These events, and others, have added to students’ financial needs, so the College is promoting its CVM Student Emergency Fund for Give Green Day, MSU’s annual day of giving back.
In March of 2020, like many schools worldwide, the Michigan State University College of Veterinary Medicine pivoted the majority of its didactic curriculum to a remote learning format (students performing clinical rounds have still been able to do so in person), and things haven’t been exactly the same since.
By Dr. Sarah Speth (DVM ’07)
To help address the national shortage of rural veterinarians, Gary and Carolyn Trimner donated $50,000 toward scholarships to support veterinary medicine students who participate in the Michigan State University College of Veterinary Medicine’s Food Systems Fellowship Program. With personal ties to the Program and a love for animals, Gary and Carolyn share how their lives led them to this generous act.
In celebration of Black History Month, the College features Dr. Tracie E. Bunton, who was the College’s first Black female veterinary graduate. She earned her doctor of veterinary medicine degree from the College in 1977. She then went on to complete a residency and earn her PhD in Comparative Pathology from the University of California at Davis, and is a diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Pathologists (DACVP). She also received an associate of applied science degree in fashion merchandising from Parsons School of Design (The New School), and is an accomplished artist who explores African American cultural identity and experience.
Bunton was recently featured by the Multicultural Veterinary Medical Association (MCVMA) and Black DVM Network in their project The First but Not the Last, which highlights stories of Black individuals in veterinary medicine.
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