The U. C. Davis School of Veterinary Medicine
The University of California, Davis School of Veterinary Medicine offers training and education in research and service programs promoting animal health, public health, and environmental health. The only veterinary school in the U. C. system, the U. C. Davis School of Veterinary Medicine is ranked among the best veterinary schools in the nation by the U.S. News & World Report. Dean Bennie I. Osburn has led the school since 1996. The U. C. Davis School of Veterinary Medicine provides a variety of degrees and programs, including a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine, a Master of Preventive Veterinary Medicine, a D.V.M./Ph.D. dual degree for veterinarian-scientists, M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in 17 academic disciplines, and a Master of Public Health jointly offered with the U. C. Davis School of Medicine, as well as a hospital residency program for veterinarians in 32 specialties and continuing professional education for veterinarians and animal health technicians. Established in 1946 and opened in 1948, the U. C. Davis School of Veterinary Medicine has served as a leader and innovator the field of veterinary medicine ever since. The U. C. Davis School of Veterinary Medicine provides unmatched training to the up-and-coming generation of small- and large-animal veterinarians, developing future leaders in public health, disease control, biotechnology, environmental protection, food safety, higher education, and research. Throughout the years, the school and its students have developed dynamic education programs reflective of the need to discover solutions for rising diseases in animals and humans, and they have shared their findings with communities around the world. The U. C. Davis School of Veterinary Medicine consists of 300 faculty members, and 90 residents. The school maintains an annual budget of $147 million and an annual research budget of $63 million, and it receives over $36 million in scholarship endowments and $1.7 million in annual scholarship support.