| Staff at the Cornell Hospital for Animals take time out to celebrate the facility's new name March 22. Matthew Fondeur/University Photography |
Cornell's College of Veterinary Medicine has changed the name of its clinical facility to the Cornell University Hospital for Animals.
Formerly known as the Cornell University Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, the facility will continue to emphasize patient care, administrators say.
"Our faculty members believe that the new name better reflects the hospital's primary mission -- the medical care of animals," said Robert O. Gilbert, the college's associate dean for clinical programs and professional service, in discussing the name change. "As a teaching hospital where veterinary students, residents and interns learn their professional skills, we will continue to provide leadership in patient care, education, clinical investigation and scientific innovation. But it all comes down to animals; ultimately we're doing this for them," Gilbert said.
"The name captures in five words all that is special about our unique position as Cornell's veterinary teaching hospital," explained Bonita S. Voiland, the college's assistant dean for hospital operations.
The new name was approved by the executive committee of the Cornell Board of Trustees in December and became official March 22. The hospital moved into new, state-of-the-art facilities in 1996 and comprises three units:
"The professional excellence of our veterinary medical staff, combined with the newest technologies and advanced techniques in medicine and surgery, assures the best health care for all of our animal patients," explained Ducharme.
"Many of the hospital's patients with complicated medical or surgical problems are referred here by their veterinarians for evaluation here by our faculty specialists," said Miller.
Specialty medicine services at the hospital include anesthesiology, behavioral medicine, cardiology, dentistry, dermatology, emergency medicine and critical care, equine performance testing clinic, farriery service, intensive care, internal medicine (including a new comparative cancer program), medical imaging, ophthalmology, soft-tissue and orthopedic surgery, theriogenology (reproductive health), and wildlife and exotic animal medicine (including zoo animal medicine).
| Cornell Chronicle Front Page | | Table of Contents | | Cornell News Service Home Page |