Hello! Although I am new to the OVVH team, I have been working with OVVH as a relief veterinarian for many years. I graduated from North Carolina University Veterinary school and I have over 23 years of experience in small-animal medicine. In my spare time I enjoy reading, cooking, bird-watching, hiking and learning to knit. I share my life with my husband, son, and a crazy cat. I enjoy helping patients recover after orthopedic surgery and treating other orthopedic conditions, as well neurological problems. I have a special interest in Canine Physical Rehabilitation, in which I completed the course work through the University of Tennessee Veterinary School. Shortly after graduation, I moved to the northern Virginia area and have been living and practicing in the area since then. I attended Purdue University and received my Bachelor of Science degree in Biology and my Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree there. Tired of missing my family, I decided to move back to the East Coast and joined the OVVH team! My personal interests include reading, gardening, hiking, traveling, jewelry making and fused glass. Seeking safer work, I moved to the San Francisco area to work for a corporate-owned small-animal practice. My first job took me to California, where I worked in a mixed animal practice, treating ostriches, wolves, cows, pigs, and everything in between! Although the variety was stimulating, it had the downside of being physically risky. I am a native of Maryland, but left to attend the Ohio State University School of Veterinary Medicine, graduating in 1993. My wife and cat take care of me when I'm not at work! I have a special interest in ultrasonography and have performed more than a thousand sonograms on dogs and cats. I also worked a great deal with Greyhound Rescue, Inc., both pre-and post-adoption. I am past vice-president of The Shiloh Project, a nonprofit group dedicated to helping at-risk youth learn compassion and responsibility by allowing them to socialize and train rescued homeless dogs. The Vienna/Fairfax area has been my home since graduation from veterinary school. I graduated from the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine at Virginia Tech in 1995 and was inducted into the Phi Zeta Veterinary Honor Society while at school. After graduation, I worked at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine as a lab technologist dealing with organ transplants, paternity tests and research studies. I spent most of my childhood in South Carolina and graduated from Clemson University with a BS in Microbiology. I also work out at the gym and take weekly yoga classes. In my spare time, I enjoy a variety of outside activities, including kayaking, biking and hiking. I love the connections I have created and feel very lucky to be at OVVH. This work plays a big part in my everyday role working with clients' by caring for their pets, but also caring for clients' needs in times of distress. The Oprah Winfrey Show featured my work with the human-animal bond in 2001. In addition to my veterinary education, I have been trained as a cognitive therapist, a skill that assists me in my interest in the human-animal bond and the relationship of companion animals to our emotional and physical health. I love being at OVVH, because I can care for animals in an enjoyable, warm atmosphere, and my clients are my extended family. My love of animals began when at the age of eight, I found a baby raccoon. Wolfsmanagement in Österreich.As founder of Oakton-Vienna Veterinary Hospital, I grew up in Washington, D.C. We are commissioned by the ÖZ to advise it with biological expertise, to act as a central point of contact for monitoring and assessment of kills, and to genetically analyze the DNA samples collected in this context. Interest groups, nature conservation organizations and scientific institutes such as FIWI were accepted as extraordinary members. The ordinary, voting members of this association are the federal government and the federal states. The „ Österreichzentrum Bär, Wolf, Luchs" (ÖZ) was founded for the management of large predators. In Austria, the federal states have the task of keeping problems with large predators at bay while still enabling positive species population development. Living together with these protected species is associated with potential for conflict in the human-dominated cultural landscape. The large predators bear, wolf and lynx are increasingly returning to Austria.
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