Professional Staff
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Dr. Thomas McKenna |
Dr. McKenna joined the WVDL staff in March 2007. Prior to coming to Wisconsin Dr. McKenna spent 13 years at the Plum Island Animal Disease Center in New York, where he conducted research on recombinant DNA vaccines for foot-and-mouth disease and worked in the Foreign Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory (FADDL), most recently as the Director of FADDL. Tom earned his DVM and PhD from the University of California – Davis. He also holds a BS in Biological Sciences from the University of Alaska – Fairbanks, and a BS in Business and Economics from Lehigh University.
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Dr. Peter Vanderloo |
Dr. Vanderloo has 23 years experience as a practicing veterinarian in a mixed-animal practice in southwest Wisconsin. His primary emphasis in practice was dairy cattle. While in practice, Dr. Vanderloo had the opportunity to be involved with organized veterinary medicine, including the AVMA and the Wisconsin Veterinary Medical Association which he served as President.. He is delighted to be providing service to the veterinarians and producers of Wisconsin at the WVDL.
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Dr. Philip Bochsler |
Dr. Bochsler joined the WVDL in July, 2001. After graduation from veterinary college he spent two and a half years in mixed animal practice in Washington and Oregon before entering a residency in pathology at Cornell. He subsequently worked at the University of Tennessee’s College of Veterinary Medicine in diagnostic pathology and teaching, and also performed research on the immunological responses of cattle to toxin from Gram-negative bacteria. Dr. Bochsler was an Associate Professor and the Director of Anatomic Pathology Service at that institution before moving to Madison and the WVDL. His interests and expertise span a large number of animal species and an array of diseases.
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Dr. Ogi Okwumabua Section Head of Bacteriology MS, Georgia Institute of Technology, 1989 PhD, Kansas State University |
Dr. Okwumabua (Dr. Ogi to his friends) joined WVDL in August 2001 to lead our excellent Bacteriology section. He has worked and taught in the area of veterinary bacteriology for 20 years at several universities and as a scientist for Bayer Corporation. Most recently, he was Associate Professor of Microbiology and Assistant Director of Diagnostic Microbiology at Tuskegee University. He has personal interests in the spread of antibiotic resistance among bacterial pathogens and the development of new microbiology assays and procedures.
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Dr. Kathy Toohey Kurth Section Head of Virology PhD, Univ. of Minnesota, 1992 |
A native of Madison, Dr. Kurth earned her BS and MS from the University of Wisconsin. She had 10 years of experience as a teacher and clinical microbiologist prior to pursuing a doctoral degree. Her two virology postdoctoral fellowships were done at the NIH and at the National Veterinary Services Laboratory (Plum Island and Ames, Iowa, respectively). She has a total of 15 years of experience in virology and molecular biology. Her past and current interests include development of molecular diagnostics for viral antigens. She is delighted to be back in Wisconsin and to be part of the new WVDL.
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Dr. Cindy Bell |
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Dr. Bell is a native of the Quad Cities area of Illinois. She earned her BS degree at the University of Iowa and an MS degree in Microbial Engineering at the University of Minnesota. Making her way clockwise around the upper Midwest, she lived and worked in northwestern Wisconsin at the time of applying to veterinary school with an interest in animal agriculture. Immediately after earning a DVM in 2008 she served a year as ocular pathology fellow at the Comparative Ocular Pathology Laboratory of Wisconsin, then she stayed to complete an anatomic pathology residency at UW-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine. Dr. Bell has worked at WVDL since July 2012 where she enjoys the diverse diagnostic caseload while also acting as co-founder and principal pathologist for the Center for Comparative Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology at the UW-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine. (http://www.vetmed.wisc.edu/dss/CCOMP)
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Dr. Scott Jones Diagnostic Pathologist and Supervisor, Barron Lab DVM, Michigan State Univ., 1978 |
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Dr. Jones was hired in his present position in April of 1984. Prior to his work here, Dr. Jones worked for Jerome Foods. He has also worked for the Virginia Diagnostic Lab and practiced in Markesan, Wisconsin. Dr. Jones enjoys being outdoors in his spare time and this time of year can often be found walking through the woods with his Brittany Spaniels seeking ruffled grouse. He also enjoys gardening and constantly treats his fellow employees to his extra produce.
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Dr. Mark Carlson Diagnostic Pathologist, Barron Lab DVM, Univ. of Minnesota, 1978 |
Dr. Carlson worked at the Wisconsin Animal Health Lab in Madison from June 1984 until April of 1990. He then transferred to the Barron Lab. Prior to joining the diagnostic lab he practiced in Elmwood, Wisconsin. He also practiced in Monson Massachusetts for one year after graduating from veterinary school. He also enjoys running, biking, gardening and traveling.
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Dr. Donald Sockett |
Dr. Sockett joined the WVDL in June 1995. He grew up on a dairy farm in Southern Ontario. He completed a clinical internship at the University of Minnesota and a residency program at Colorado State University. Both programs were in large animal medicine with an emphasis on food producing animals. He has worked as the ruminant species epidemiologist for four years in the Division of Animal Health (Wisconsin Department of Agriculture Trade & Consumer Protection) prior to coming to the laboratory and has a strong interest in infectious diseases. He has authored several scientific articles and has given presentations at regional, national and international veterinary meetings on a wide variety of different topics, particularly BVD, causes of bovine abortions, Johne’s disease and leptospirosis.
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Dr. Melissa Behr |
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Dr. Behr came to the WVDL from upstate New York, where she studied mouse models of West Nile Virus infection, and bat diseases at the NYSDOH Wadsworth Center. Prior to that, she was a diagnostic pathologist at the University of Illinois' veterinary diagnostic lab (99-02), and at New Mexico State's Veterinary Diagnostic Services in Albuquerque, NM (87-99). She started out as a mixed practitioner in upstate New York, and is thrilled to be back in a diagnostic setting which also happens to be closer to the course of the American Birkebeiner.
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Dr. Doug Lyman |
After graduation from Iowa State in 1981, I was in mainly dairy cattle practice in north central Wisconsin for 20+ years with a particular interest in dairy nutrition. I did a pathology residency at UW Madison and became board certified in 2008. My pathology interests include dairy calf diseases and production limiting diseases of dairy cows along with anything else that comes along. My hobbies include all manner of silent sports, reading, building/remodeling and farming. I look forward to working with Wisconsin veterinarians.
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Dr. Delwyn Keane |
After obtaining a Bachelor of Veterinary Science in New Zealand, I gained my pathology training in Guelph, Ontario, and after a brief sojourn in England moved to Wisconsin where I developed an interest in TSE diagnostics. I am an avid outdoors person and love to garden, cycle and play tennis.
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Dr. Hui-Min Hsu |
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Dr. Hsu joined the WVDL in December 2000. Prior to her work here, she spent 6 years at the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, where she conducted fish health inspections throughout the state of Wisconsin and performed microbiology and pathology diagnostic work. She earned her DVM in Taiwan before coming to the United States to pursue graduate studies, specializing in fish diseases at Cornell University. Dr. Hsu is a certified Fish Pathologist with the American Fisheries Society. Her interests include work in the development of diagnostic assays for aquatic bacterial and parasitic pathogens. |
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