Pfizer Announces First Veterinary Scholarships

US - Pfizer Animal Health and American Veterinary Medical Foundation are offering 222 scholarships to help decrease the debt burden of veterinary students.
calendar icon 7 May 2010
clock icon 3 minute read
Pfizer Animal Health

The initiative, designed to support the future of the veterinary profession, will provide up to $2 million in scholarships over its first three years. Administered in partnership with the American Veterinary Medical Foundation (AVMF), the program is an opportunity for Pfizer Animal Health to further demonstrate its support of veterinary education, as well as its commitment to encouraging more students to focus on food-animal practice and increasing diversity in the profession.

In the initial year of the program, Pfizer Animal Health has awarded 222 second- and third-year US veterinary students with a total of $555,000 in scholarships. Scholarship recipients, who hail from 28 US veterinary schools accredited through the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA), are from diverse backgrounds, ages, genders, physical disability and ethnicity. Although open to all students, 18 per cent represent students from diverse backgrounds, and two-thirds are studying to practice food-animal veterinary medicine.

Scholarship recipients were selected based on several criteria, including academic excellence, leadership, diversity and potential for contributing to food-animal or food-safety veterinary medicine, and will each receive $2,500 this year.

The scholarship programme is part of a broader commitment from Pfizer Animal Health to support the future of the veterinary industry – including scholarships, training and education, and research and development.

"Rising debt, insufficient diversity and fewer practicing or skilled food animal veterinarians in rural America are serious challenges to the veterinary profession," said Michael McFarland, DVM, group director, Veterinary Medical Services & Corporate Citizenship, for Pfizer Animal Health. "As a market leader, we have a responsibility and an obligation to help support the future of the veterinary profession."

The US Department of Agriculture currently projects a shortage of 600 veterinarians and anticipates demand for food-animal veterinarians will increase 12 to 13 per cent by 2016. Over the last few years, about 2,600 veterinarians graduate annually from US veterinary schools. The average debt a veterinary student incurs by graduation is approximately $120,000.

"This scholarship programme is a huge investment in the future of veterinary medicine," says AVMF Executive Director, Michael Cathey. "Pfizer has recognised the gaps and has set out to proactively and generously help address them."

The Pfizer Animal Health Veterinary Student Scholarship Program complements a number of other Pfizer Animal Health programmes supporting the veterinary profession, including more than $15 million invested last year in universities, industry education and training, scholarships, and allied organisations.

"As the global leader in animal health, we're proud to take the lead in strengthening the long-term viability of the veterinary profession," said Clint Lewis, president of US Operations for Pfizer Animal Health. "The magnitude of this initiative underscores our level of commitment and dedication to supporting veterinarians, their practices and their profession."

For more information on the scholarship programme, click here.

TheCattleSite Newsdesk

© 2000 - 2024 - Global Ag Media. All Rights Reserved | No part of this site may be reproduced without permission.