The exhibition and companion website tell the lesser-known story of how movements of ordinary citizens helped shape the changing American health care system.
Several programs that are pivotal in the recruitment and retention of underrepresented students at WSU Pullman are receiving a financial boost from an anonymous corporate donor.
Kenyan patients who spend more than three days in the nation’s hospitals are more likely to harbor a form of bacteria resistant to one of the most widely used antibiotic classes, according to a WSU-led study.
The university has one of the few veterinary programs in the nation with a deep practice management curriculum focused on the financial basics of business and veterinary medicine.
Years into sobriety, seemingly innocent stimuli — like songs, smells or specific visuals — can trigger memories of earlier drug use and an intense craving that can cause even a long-recovered addict to relapse.
For nearly two decades the three‑semester Veterinary Teaching Hospital Undergraduate Internship has provided pre‑vet undergraduates a glimpse into veterinary general and specialty services for small, large, and exotic animals.
The new Large and Agricultural Animal Ambulatory Service offers preventative and general care for cattle, horses, camelids and other large mammals in a 60‑mile radius around WSU Pullman on weekdays.
The WSU veterinarian and assistant professor was recently awarded one of the highest national honors for veterinary rehabilitation — the 2023 John J. Sherman III Award for Excellence in Veterinary Rehabilitation.
A federally funded project at WSU’s College of Veterinary Medicine could be pivotal in detecting emerging viruses that may threaten important and at‑risk aquatic species like salmon.
Samantha Gizerian among twenty-one WSU faculty named as the newest members of the Core-to-Career professional development program that impacts undergraduates’ career readiness.